The message that Maureen Daly conveys in the story "Sixteen" is that in affairs of the heart it is best to use your head to temper the feelings of the heart. The main character says, "My heart still prays but my mind laughs. Finally, mind wins!" "Sixteen" is a story of unrequited love. The young girl in the story feels the young man she yearns for is different; he really has feelings for her. But, he never calls, and he ends up being like so many other young men she has fallen for. “I know what the stars knew all the time—he’ll never, never call—never,” she realizes. The message is an age old one that many young people learn over and over as they grow to use reason when dealing with love as opposed to using only their feelings, which run the gamut of love and passion, to anger, and finally to reason and moving on.
Carefree would be opposite to the above mentioned
Inferred you are referring to literary work.
Explanation:
Note that the writer uses the forest to paint how one would actually feel if one is alone in the forest, using the castle tower room gives the reader the idea about feeling unsafe in a seemingly safe place.
The symbolic significance of the forest setting tells us that the speaker may either be dreaming and as such be in an unconscious state of mind.
Thus, the speaker is frightened to the core because of his perceived ordeal in place of isolation–the forest.
A - 'CPR' is an acronym; and acronyms are capitalized but not punctuated.
This question is simple, a.