The correct answer is "I felt a little sorry, and would have called him back, but I found he was returning of his own accord."
Explanation: In "The Cabuliwallah" by Rabindranath Tagore, the narrator did not like the idea of the Cabuliwallah showing on the day of his daughter's wedding, and denied his request to see her. The narrator begins to feel bad for him, and before the Cabuliwallah leaves, he accepts the gifts he brought for her.
Answer:
Layla's reaction is not to accept hospitalization and to seek out people from other oppressed groups and fight against this sick system in which she and her family are being subjected. Layla's parents, fearing reprisals, react differently and just accept the new situation in which they live.
Explanation:
This question is about the book "Internment" by Samira Ahmed that tells the story of Layla Amin, a Muslim girl who, due to racism and intolerance, is forced to live with her parents in an internment camp for Muslim citizens. In this field, Muslims are forced to the most diverse abuses, being forced to live with very few resources that establish a low and miserable standard of living. Layla's parents recognize that they are at a disadvantage and have a reaction of acceptance to the life they are living, however Layla's reaction is different and she decides that she will fight these oppressive Jutno system with a group of people who are also victims of it.
Answer:
A. She remembers meeting some who had been blinded.
Explanation:
Mrs. Farquar is telling how the injured child remember her to natives she saw, that has “no sight in their eyes” they were blind, and this was due to the “spitting of a snake”, the poison of the snake left the natives without sight, and in this part she remembers meeting those natives.
The teacher asked the students where they had been so long.
She asked the children whether they could swim.
Rubel said with grief that he was a fool.
The poor main exclaimed with grief that he had lost everything.
I asked him whether he might get GPA-5 in exam.