Answer: Emma's bee homeschooled all of her life, but when her brother starts high school, she starts feeling behind, and decides to go to public school for fifth grade. The night before she's starting school her game warden father gets a call about a rabbit who's stuck in a fence. Emma goes along for the rescue, and ends up falling in love with the rabbit, a tamed former pet, who she named Lapin. school starts off with a rough start: Emma get pair up with a boy name Jack, a boy with autism, for a class project, and starts to worry that her association with him will prevent her from making friends, but she has a kind heart, and with some help from her family and Lapin, she figures out a way to help Jack while navigating uncertain waters of fifth grade friendships.
<em>Hope this helps, have a blessed day.</em>
The fourth quote shows that the narrator is persevering through the hardships. The first quote only says that Arab Sheikh is pushing the narrator on, not that the narrator is actually trying. The second quote is quite the opposite of going on - in this one, the narrator wants to stop. The third quote only talks about the pains the narrator was experiencing, not of if he would go on or not. Only the fourth quote talks about moving on despite all the pain and aching.
In my opinion, the lines that reflect the themes of barrenness and emptiness are 4. The jar was gray and bare and <span>5. It did not give of bird or bush, / </span><span>Like nothing else in Tennessee. The jar in Stevens' poem epitomizes the effect and positioning of civilization within nature. Apparently, nature (nothing, that is everything else in Tennessee) still has powers which the futile and barren civilization doesn't have.</span>