Answer:
Repetitive thoughts
From morning to morning, I wonder
Is this the freedom and fraternity that we have built?
Have we really evolved?
Or was evolution just biological and does not extend to social issues?
From childhood to youth
From youth to adulthood
Will I be able to honor the example you set for me?
You seem very fair to this world
Be able to not corrupt your teachings and practice justice
Even within injustice?
But you are so centered and incorruptible
An example to follow
But society corrupts us
and I don't know how to resist.
But I know what you told me
and admire you without blinking
But I feel lost
Hopeless to disclose.
Explanation:
Jem is a teenager. In addition to having to lead with the thoughts of adolescence that are already quite repetitive and contradictory, he has to deal with the thoughts he has in relation to society.
She believes that society is vile, prejudiced and unjust. he believes it is difficult not to be sucked into these thoughts and feels hopeless about his place in society and how not to be corrupted by it. However, he admires the position of his father Atticus, as an integral and correct person, he has his father as an example and is afraid of not being able to reach that level.
The poem was created to express these feelings.
When making an outline it should be organized.
Neither Harold nor his siblings are feeling well today
Answer:
Now might I do it pat, now he is praying; And now I'll do't—and so he goes to heaven, And so am I reveng'd. That would be scann'd: A villain kills my father; and for that I, his sole son, do this same villain send To Heaven O, this is hire and salary, not revenge. (Hamlet, act IV, scene III)
Explanation:
The above excerpt shows exactly the indecision and the urning point of Shakespeare's tragedy. That's because this excerpt reveals the moment when Hamlet comes across his father's killer. Hamlet wants to avenge his father's death by killing the murderer, but when he finds the murderer, he realizes that he is praying.
Although this is the perfect time for his vigil, since it would be easy to kill a man who is praying, Hamlet realizes that he would be doing the killer a favor by sending him to heaven since he was not practicing any sin. For this reason, Hamlet decides to kill him at another time, when he is sinning, so that his soul goes to hell.