Your answer is orthography
When he says he is alone, he means that he is abandoned by God. He is in a concentration camp, where he is forced to witness death almost every day, and he cannot do anything about it. However, nobody even tries to do anything - there is no sense of solidarity and fighting for freedom; there is no friendship in the camp; there is no sense of community, so even though he is surrounded by many people, he is ultimately alone given that he doesn't care about them and in turn they don't care about him. Also, he believes God has 'left the Earth' given that he doesn't even try to help his creations.
Answer:
The narrator's description of the mother contrasted sharply with the revelation of the mother's secret, revealing her to be someone she presented herself not to be which surprises and shocks the reader, as the mother was practically described as being a saint.
Explanation:
In A Dead Woman's Secret the narrator described the mother as a rigid disciplinarian who instilled unshakable morals in her children, which resulted in the son becoming a magistrate without pity for the weak and the daughter becoming a nun.
This description creates an image of the mother as a virtuous woman in the reader's mind, as also assumed by her son and daughter.
So the surprise is real when the mother is revealed to be a woman who had an affair with a man that was not her husband, the behavior is not in keeping with who she was described to be.
"<span>Only this and nothing more. And so faintly you came tapping, And each separate dying ember wrought its ghost upon the floor."</span>
Answer:
2 Tu Tu
Explanation:
Didi to to I of if to top do so go to do so we we do t do to is an of sir to us to if to us all ya to of hip of to egg to yr do is