The text brings the idea that humans are to the inhabitans of Mars what monkeys are to us: inferior beings, with inferior intellects. The human being has always been so vain to believe that we were alone in this world, and the text brings to our perspective that the inhabitans of Mars probably see us in such inferior way as we could see them or any animal of our Earth.
Answer:
The author challenges readers, which makes readers question their own views on protecting sequoias.
Explanation:
The impact of the author's choice to begin the article with those two sentences was to challenge the reader to question their views about protecting sequoias.
The first sentence began by saying that we are often told that the world is deteriorating because of love of money (sacrifice to mormon) and that every sequoia he knows is "waving its branches for joy" because it has heard the good news about the defending of trees.
Answer:
Shakespeare's father slipped from wealth to bankruptcy, leaving his impoverished son to struggle to establish himself as a poet and actor
Explanation:
Answer:
The theme that can be inferred is fear. Anne Frank was scared. She had a fear that she wasn't going to survive. In some way she knew she wasn't going to.
Answer and explanation:
At the end of the second paragraph Soueif tells readers that "the lights of Cairo will not come on tonight," referring to a government-imposed curfew and shutdown of internet and phone communications. This glimpse contributes to Soueif's description of the present as in the present will be constantly changing given the uncertainty of not knowing how that night will end taking into account the events that occur.