Answer:
<u>Like a rose</u>
I bloom in the spring
I smell like your favorite perfume, crisp and sweet
I show up on your lovers holiday
I would love to live forever, thank you
Slowly I soak up rays of joy and brightness
only to eat my body and soul away
I fall piece by piece
petal by petal
until I am no more
I soak in my own corpse water
until I am no more
like the rose that I am
*please mark me as brainliest and cite sources because plagarism*
Question:
Which of the following best describes a conflict between what the daughters think and what they do?
A. They think they're busy, but they don't actually do anything.
B. They think they're mourning their father, but they actually celebrate.
C. They think they're charming, but they're rude to guests.
D. They think they're being sympathetic to each other, but they really hurt each others' feelings.
Answer:
The correct answer is B)
Explanation:
On page 15, Constantia comes to Josephine with a strange smile on her face. It was a week since their fathers' death and Constantine had come to remind Josephine that it was a week already. Josephine's response was a smile. One would have thought that their response would be that of pain knowing that the Colonel was never coming back again. Reading in between the lines that followed thereafter, one could infer that they were happy that the Colonel was gone.
For in those moments, the narrators describe how metaphorically even the Buddha at the mantlepiece seemed to be smiling at her. The still image was not smiling, she simply saw a reflection of her emotions projected on the image.
Cheers!
The answer for this question is A)
A. Amusing is the answer to your problem c:
Answer:
The two men, Stephen and Jarvis, both undergoes an emotional course in the novel. At the end of the novel, in chapter 36, both men have become humble and were able to understand one another. They both became close to each other.
The relationship that they both shared were the loss of their sons. The nature of their relationship was connected with the common grief of loss.
Explanation:
"Cry, the Beloved Country" is a novel written by Alan Paton. The novel is based on the havoc of apartheid and how it affected the lives of the characters, especially of Stephen Kumalo and James Jarvis.
Stephen Kumalo was an Angelican Priest, who have a strong faith in God and belonged to Zulu tribe. Whereas James Jarvis was a wealthy landowner. There paths clash with one another because of the connections between their sons. Absalom Kumalo, the son of Stephen, murders Arthur Jarvis, the son of James Jarvis. After much revelation James changed his perspective about the injustices in South Africa and forgives Kumalos.
<u>In chapter 36, Stephen goes to a secluded place on the hill to spend alone time, as it was the day of execution of his son, Absalom. On his way to the hill, he met Jarvis, who knew the dire need of Stephen to be alone. </u>
<u>This chapter reveals the changes that these two men have undergone throughout the novel. They both have become humble and were able to understand each other and each other traditions. They both became aquainted with each other. The relationship that these two men shared were the common loss of their sons. This loss brought both men together and shared the relationship of grief of loss</u>.