Answer:
. The boy comprehends that, despite his best efforts, he cannot escape time, and he too will become a part of history.
Explanation:
The boy dislikes the idea that the whole family has been keeping their mementos in the chest. He does not want to feel engaged into looking into the contents. "f...contents of the chest never came quite clear,.....because he didn't want to know."; "....but he hadn't wanted to listen. A thing so old disgusted him...", these words reflect the boy's feelings towards the passage of time , but these seem to be senseless when <em>he</em> gets <em>shocked </em>on coming across <em>his own</em> drawings. He drew them when he was five.
It means that all the things that have the impression that the place was ugly and dull disappeared in the light of twilight. In the twilight it looked powerful and beautiful.
Answer:
The Reverend Mother tells Maria that she must go back. In the next song she tells her to "Climb every <em><u>mountain</u></em>/ Ford every <em><u>stream</u></em>/ Follow every rainbow ‘til you find your <em><u>dream</u></em>."
Explanation:
The given lyrics are from the song "Climb Ev'ry Mountain" from the 1994 musical "The Sound of Music". This musical became one of the greatest movies even to this day.
The musical stars Julie Andrews as a young Maria von Trapp who became a governess of seven children of a naval officer. The story is based on the true life of the Von Trapp family.
The correct lyrics goes like this-
<em>"Climb every </em><u><em>mountain</em></u><em>/ Ford every </em><u><em>stream</em></u><em>/ Follow every rainbow ‘til you find your </em><u><em>dream</em></u><em>."</em>
Answer:
The antagonist is Lily's (protagonist) father, who is struggling with accepting the past
(spoilers if you've never read the novel/seen the movie)
T. Ray, Lily's father, actually has a very complicated mindset. But let's get something out of the way, he is abusive to Lily. He hurt people because he didn't want to deal with his own emotions after Debroah's (mother of Lily) death. That being said, in some absurd way, he does care for Lily. His mindset is like this, and also keep in mind T. Ray was a huge racist too:
Beginning of the story: Hurt and angry, and doesn't know how to process it. He takes it out on Lily.
Middle of the story: Lily left, even more hurt and angry, betrayed also. He needs to find Lily before anyone hurts her (implying the ladies running the bee farm)
End of the story: Lily doesn't want to come home? He doesn't want to hurt her anymore after seeing he protest. So, after the angry rampage, he leaves her be. He accepts that she isn't in danger at all.
I don't want to write the whole thing for you, since I have no clue how you write, and also I believe you can do it! I hope this helps (I've only seen the movie so I could have missed some things)