The reason why they both have similar moods is because they're both about having control over your own fate and life, and just getting through life.However they both have different endings because "We Real Cool" is about being rebellious and having fun and getting into mischief, and at the end it says: "We Sing sin.We Thin gin.We Jazz June.We Die soon.".While "Invictus" is about no matter what the speaker goes through he will never give in and surrender, which it says at the end of the poem:"I'am the master of my fate; I'am the captain of my soul."
Answer and Explanation:
Jay Gatsby is the main character of the novel "The Great Gatsby", by American author F. Scott Fitzgerald. When the narrator, Nick, first hears of him, Gatsby is but a name, faceless, connected to grand parties and wealth.
On the outside, Gatsby has an almost flawless appearance. He dresses finely and modernly. He lives in a castle, surrounded by servants. He drives a fancy car, and knows influential people. He always, as Daisy describes him, "looks cool". He says he is an Oxford man, the inheritor of a big fortune, a world traveler. He is good-looking, well-spoken - a "true" gentleman. Gatsby gives the impression of being secure, of knowing his place in the world. He seems to have life figured out.
But there is a reason why Gatsby is only "almost" flawless. On the inside, he is none of the things described above. Even though he is a good man with grand dreams, he is insecure. Born in extreme poverty, Gatsby thinks wealth will solve all his self-esteem issues. He is afraid people will see through the façade he has built, see the true Gatsby: an uneducated man whose fortune comes from selling illegal alcohol. On the inside, Gatsby is far from being a gentleman or from being cool. He is scared, tense, eager, almost desperate. He wants to be seen, but he also fears it tremendously.
Answer: I don’t understand
But ok
Explanation:
I don’t know
Answer:
A pronoun is a word used in the place of a noun.
Explanation:
A pronoun (I, me, he, she, herself, you, it, that, they, each, few, many, who, whoever, whose, someone, everybody, etc.) is a word that takes the place of a noun.
Example sentence: Joe saw Jill, and he waved at her. The pronouns <em>he </em>and <em>her </em>take the place of <u>Joe </u>and <u>Jill</u>, respectively.
The large group is excited about the upcoming event.