Answer:
He will be more sympathetic to those who are similar to the way he once was.
Explanation:
From the book, "Flowers for Algernon" by Daniel Keyes, Charlie Gordon was once mentally ret*rded but he became more intelligent after he underwent surgery.
He has an experience in the diner one day after a mentally ret*rded boy mistakenly crashes some plates and receives cruel taunts from the other customers and the boy who does not know he is being taunted and insulted, smiles with them and this episode makes Charlie so angry that he shouts to the insensitive crowd that the boy is a human and thus deserves respect.
This experience would likely change Charlie because He will be more sympathetic to those who are similar to the way he once was.
I'm not using evidence from the book, but I can explain how the first person affects the story and reader. You can add the evidence when I give you the prompt answer. - First person point of view affects the story and reader because of the different it makes to the plot and whole setup of the story. First person changes the way the story is set up because it is one of the characters narrating the story. It affects the reader because when you are reading the book, you feel like you are the character in the story. It makes reading the story more enjoyable.
The root word for a geographer is Geography if I'm right
<span>Having nearly a year before issued the carefully worded Emancipation Proclamation, which relied on the wartime powers of the executive to liberate slaves in the Confederacy, Lincoln now painted in bolder strokes. Referring to the notion of equality in the midst of a wartime social revolution, as African Americans walked off southern plantations and into the northern army, Lincoln seemed to be pushing the country forward. The president called on Americans to dedicate themselves to “the unfinished work” of those who had fought at Gettysburg, thus joining America’s founding ideal of equality with African Americans’ aspirations for liberty.
The correct answer is:
</span><span>B. The signing of the Emancipation Proclamation</span>