Hello. This question is incomplete. The full question is:
Read this excerpt from a speech.
I have had my share of scrapes and cuts; I have even had stitches and a broken pinky finger. None of these injuries slowed me down much, and I never gave much consideration to the care I received. Maybe you are like me, charging through life, assuming other people will take care of the bumps and bruises you incur. Well, the community center has a first-aid class that might allow you to take charge of your own health. And who knows? A certification from this course might qualify you to apply for babysitting or lifeguarding jobs in the future.
What line reveals the speaker's efforts to relate to the audience?
Answer:
<em>"Maybe you are like me, charging through life, assuming other people will take care of the bumps and bruises you incur.
"</em>
Explanation:
In the lines above, the author approaches the audience by communicating directly with readers and establishing a situation where readers can identify with him. This becomes more evident when the author states that "Maybe you are like me", which can establish a relationship of identification and even complicity between audience and author.
In summary, the line shown above reveals the speaker's efforts to relate to the audience.
Similar to 1984, there are areas of the country with extreme poverty just like those of the moles(been 3 years since I read the novel forgive me if I mess up the social classes) other ways that relate to the pandemic is that resources are severely limited. Just as is shown in the novel those in the world are forced to ration. Those who are wealthy have more than enough to last them through the pandemic, just like politicians and celebrities have no worry of their supply of resources running out . And the final comparison could be that there is total surveillance in countries over their citizens just like Big Brother. Countries like South Korea doxed their citizens in order to prevent the spread , in a way the citizens in the novel are censored and fed a false narrative
The question wants to assess your ability to analyze a poem. As this analysis depends a lot on the interpretation, I cannot write the analysis for you, but I will show you how to do it.
To analyze the poem follow these steps:
- Read the poem
- Note the poem's meter: You can do this by analyzing the number of syllables in each line of the poem and looking at how those syllables behave, that is, how the sound of each syllable is presented during the poem's reading.
- Note the price of rhymes: You can do this by noting whether there are verses that end with the same sound.
- Note the structure of the poem: You can do this by looking at the number of stanzas and lines.
- Note the presence of figures of speech and their meaning.
- show the theme and meaning of the poem.
Some information from the poem that can help you are:
- The poem talks about the discrimination that blacks suffered in America.
- The poem presents the life of a black man who does everything to fit into society.
- To be accepted, he starts acting like white people, but he suffers a lot of racism and discrimination.
- The search for acceptance ends up making something frustrating and destructive.
More information:
brainly.com/question/24450873?referrer=searchResults
To what stanza are you referring to?