The above said- statements holds true concerning today's life as well. Buddha said that death is common to all mortals. Those are born must die one day. Death is certain, can't be avoided.As ripe fruits fall of the trees, so is the life of mortals.Life of a man is like an earthen pots that breaks and meets its end. No amount of weeping and lamenting produce no gains.It rather spoils one's health and gives more pain.If only you take out the arrow of lamentation and get composed, you will get peace of mind.To overcome sorrow, become free of sorrow.But in today's world, man has forgotten this.He makes all kinds of efforts to provide himself with the comforts and earns money by all means whether wrong or right. He forgets that one day he has to die and everything will be left here here only.
The correct answer to this question is B
B. why our city needs more carpool lanes, because that topic doesn't have much evidence/facts/info to back it up as the other ones.
Answer:
Whitman claims that "All goes onward and outward, nothing collapses, / And to die is different from what any one supposed, and luckier." In other words, life continues and goes on in ways that we do not, and perhaps cannot, expect, and nothing ever truly disappears.
<span> The author says "they" knowing the people will be ashamed that they denied black people their equality.</span><span>
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