In lines 140-150, what hasn't changed is that the father still switches off the electricity generator at 10 p.m. and goes to sleep in his study. The expression "as was custom" marks that this has not changed.
The language that shows that the father is changing can be found in lines 141, 173 and 175-176:
In line 141 we learn that he does not use certain rooms ("rooms we'd stopped using").
In line 173 we read that the father "seemed lighter" and chatted with his son.
In lines 175-176 the father says that "now he might be able to come to the end-of-the-year recital" at his child's school.
He thinks of it as an opportunity to be with family
The answer is D, a flock of geese that flies by each time two characters in a story fall in love.
The narrator talks about a place where trees bear a lot of fruit. Cluade McKay was born in the West Indies where the place was loaded with trees just like the ones he describes in the first part of his poem.
<span>Langston Hughes is very angry. The term "Brother" has a new non-biblical context in his time. He's showing the duality of the term, not a new "universal" kinship. Sometimes his brother is black, sometimes his brother is white.
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and the last one it's a history that i need to find :)
This can be different for each person you ask
one reason is you can play the book out how you want to, imagine the characters your way, what the place looks like, etc. With a movie that is taken away from you. You are told how everything looks, and the movie/TV van leave out many stuff from the book