Answer:
it is "Stopped or parked the boat" returning the boat to the harbor doesn't fit the context no'r does anchoring it to the shore.When you read a story you will sometimes hear something along the lines of "A ship wreck was beached" thus supporting this answer.
Explanation:
The line you’re referring to I believe is from the poem, “Oh, Captain! My Captain!”
The lines refers to the fact that the North has won the Civil War (in the United States).
Because of how much they show of the reality of life, books are dangerous, Faber says. He argues that most people would rather experience rootlessness than really think about life.
Second, books require leisure to digest: in other words, they can be difficult, and they take time, but these are attributes, not negatives. Because they require time, books can provoke thought and yield new ideas.
Finally, Faber says, books matter if people have the freedom to act on the ideas in them: just reading a book is not the end
Hope this helps :)
Answer:
Social prejudices biases affect Jesús Colón.
Explanation:
Dark behaviors are sometimes induced by society appearances, according to the "trolley problem" experiment, Jesus Colón was affected by these biases when he saw a woman and her baby trying to cope getting off the subway, ethics would move him to offer the lady some help, but prejudices biased his intentions as racist and chauvinist thoughts stopped him providing the help she needed, passing her by causing him the feeling of being soul numbed without knowing for real if that lady was indeed prejudiced.
I always like to think of figurative meaning as deeper meaning: what is the narrator really trying to get the reader to understand? Once you have your answer, think about the key words in that excerpt that helped you uncover the figurative meaning-- these will always be figurative devices, so you're already half way through this question. (pro tip: stick to the text to uncover it-- don't stray to far from the information you are being provided)
Lastly, you're being asked to identify literary devices here, do you notice any symbols? Something that usually stands for something else that might relate to that deeper/figurative meaning? Also, think about how the way in which the author phrased these symbols impacted the overall deeper meaning.