We can tell Micah not to not to leave hope and try to improve and we can ask him or help him if he is having any difficulties, we can encourage him and not let him down we can tell him that it is not only one chance but you still got a life that has about 100 of other greater chance for u left.
<span>Nick Carraway is the first-person narrator, who's always on the outside looking in. He says at the beginning that he's "inclined to reserve all judgements,", so he's almost a non-existent narrator while actually being there to observe everyone's lives around him. </span>
Explanation:
Why do you think the Tucks can't keep a job, rather they need to make things to sell from town to town? They hate working. ... They can't find jobs because they are old. They have to keep changing jobs so no one knows they are not aging.
He is motivated by vengeance for how he was treated.
a. <em>Endure injustice with patience </em>This is the correct option.
Helen is a staunch Christian. She thinks that one should turn the other cheek to hardship. Helen strongly believes in her faith, which makes her be patient and tolerant.
d. <em>The abuse of power is wrong</em>.<em> </em>This is the correct option.
Charlotte Brontë is against the nineteenth-century Evangelical movement. She reflects this through the religious characters. Mr. Brocklehurst is a hypocrite since his family lives at the expense of the students from Lowood and he is also abusive with the students. He punishes students at school severly. Then, St. John Rivers does not respect Jane's real feelings. He obliges her to marry him just to fulfill his personal religious ambitions. These characters exercise power over the other characters.
These options are not right:
b. Fight injustice with truth. ( Helen has a religious not a rational idea of truth).
c. Answer injustice with violence ( Helen bears violence herself)
d. Eliminate injustice with reform. ( Helen dies and has not started any reform).
a. The passage of time heals all wounds.( Through Jane, who wants to strike a balance between religious thoughts and earthly pleasures, Brontë believes that wounds are part of real life).
b. The tenderness of youth is forgotten in later years. ( Brontë's focus is on criticising the Evangelical movement. She is not interested in the loss of youth's tenderness).
c. The importance of friendship cannot be underestimated. ( There is an idea that goes beyond friendship: what religion does to a person's way of life).