I think the author chose to start the book 19 years before the main events of the story so the reader could absorb things. The author technically wanted the reader(s) to understand something before reading the real story.
The part of this excerpt from Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat" describe the narrator's opinion of the sea as a hostile entity is "that there is another behind it just as important and just as nervously anxious to do something effective".
<span>The passage of the dialogue is written:
</span>
B. correctly
Punctuation such as quotation marks which highlight the speech; comma is put at the right place which includes the emphasis of two different ideas; and period is also correctly placed every after the end of the sentence. Lastly, page breaks are correctly implemented.
Answer: category-specific deficit
Jerome probably has a category-specific deficit.
The correct answer is that these lines talk about the immortality of art.
Ode on a Grecian Urn by John Keats is often interpreted as the celebration of art and its immortality. The figures depicted on the urn have passed long before the narrator examines the urn on which their lives were depicted. Even though they perished their story has been preserved on the urn, and in a sense they have become immortal through the art, which is that which remains long after we are gone.