I believe it’s the second sentence, “and when he, as a matter of course, entered it, both Perrault and Francois bombarded him with curses and cooking utensils, til he recovered from his consternation and fled Ignominiously into the outer cold.”
Answer: Dialogue.
Explanation: a dialogue is a conversation between two or more people about a specific subject. In the given excerpt we can see a conversation between two people in a train-servicing station, they are waiting for a train and they are interacting with each other. By reading the given passage we can see that Lauren Mizock has reviewed the draft of "Train Tracks" to convey plot events using dialogue.
There are two correctly punctuated sentences here:
1. That's the other thing I learned: being active is just as important as eating better foods.
2. Over the years, many of us have read the words of Henry B. Adams: "A teacher affects eternity; sge can never tell where her influence stops."
Answer:
The line that suggests the son and father relationship in the poem is <u>"Speaking indifferently to him,
</u>
<u>who had driven out the cold
</u>
<u>and polished my good shoes as well"</u>
Explanation:
'Those Winter Sundays' is a poem written by Robert Hayden. The poem is reflection of the speaker to his childhood days, when his father would lit up the fire on winter sundays to make to house warm for his family. The adult speaker also reflects upon his relationship with his father and how indifferent he was towards his love in childhood.
The line that best describes the relationship between the son and the father in poem is <em>"Speaking indifferently to him,
/who had driven out the cold
/and polished my good shoes as well..." </em>These lines from the third stanza of the poem reflects the relationship between the son and the father.
In these lines, the speaker narrates that how much emotionally far away was he from his father, when he asserts that he spoke 'indifferently' with him, who drove out cold and polished his shoes well. The next lines shows father's self-less care and love towards his son, even after his son's indifferent behavior.