I'm pretty sure what he means by this is, that when he witnessed this horrifying event he felt like it was the act of satan in action and the thought and sight of all the blood coming from her body as she was being beaten bare nearly made him pass out!!!!
I do not desire to live to distrust.-I have the heart and stomach of a king.-I myself will be your general, judge, and rewarder.
The themes of this book are the brutality of apartheid and the power of education. Mathabane is a black person born in South Africa during apartheid, and, during his childhood, he experiences extreme poverty, police brutality, and limited opportunities as a result of the racist ideology of apartheid. His parents, who are both from tribal reserves but who live in a ghetto called Alexandra, cannot get the right permits to get good jobs. They also don't have the benefit of an education because they are poor and black. Mathabane manages to prevail against overwhelming odds to get an education and go to an American college on a tennis scholarship; however, most of the black people around him face lives of extremely limited opportunity because of apartheid.
Answer:
a. alliteration and apostrophe - "O, wild West Wind"
b. imagery and alliteration - "It will flame out like shining from shook foil"
c. apostrophe and simile - "World broods with warm breast And with ah! bright wings."
d. simile and alliteration - "Thy soul was like a star"
The theme that is best depicted at the end of the Odyssey when Ulysses and the other people of Ithaca stop fighting on Minerva's command is <span>Loyalty. The rest of the choices do not answer the question above.</span>