I did one once about the Holocaust. I talked about how the Jews survived and the Nazis failed to succeed. In the poem, I related the Nazis to a storm and the Jews to people on a wooden ship out at sea.
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The author values the perception of landscape and environment details with the disconnection from the world.
We can arrive at this answer because:
- The author claims that internet connection access is increasingly prominent in the Himalayas.
- This completely changed the way people walked around and enjoyed the region.
- To reinforce this idea the author shows how his previous experiences when visiting the Himalayas.
- He shows how with limited internet access and use, he was able to see more details and appreciate the environment more intensely.
- Currently, this is no longer possible, as the internet promotes a desire to be connected and informed about everything that is happening in the universe.
Thus, the author recognizes that disconnecting from the world is necessary, as it will calm the desire for information and allow people to admire and pay attention to the region where they are.
You can have more information about the correct use of the internet at the link:
brainly.com/question/3073167
<span>The correct answer is D. At the end of the story the tension between characters is reconciled by Okeke making the decision to travel to meet his grandchildren. This is a resolution that allows all the characters in the story to find closure, which offers satisfaction to the reader.</span>
Answer:
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Thoreau means when he says the line “as for work, we haven’t any of any consequence” is all work that we do is trivial and meaningless. He also means that there is not any work of importance, it is all trivial and meaningless. Henry David Thoreau is an essayist, historian, surveyor, naturalist, tax resister, philosopher, and poet.