Answer:The theme of a story is what the author is trying to convey — in other words, the central idea of the story. ... The plot is simply what happens in the story and the order of the story's events, and the moral is the lesson that the writer wants the main character (and by extension, you) to learn from the story.
Explanation:
I think it’s because it was too expensive and there was apparently no need
Writing style of Thoreau is full of metaphors and the sentences consist of observations after observations.
<u>Explanation:</u>
For Thoreau in Walden, opportunity implies freeing life from the encumbrances that keep one from living from one's spirit's inside. As he puts it: Thoreau accomplished opportunity by disentangling his material needs however much as could be expected. This liberated him from the need to win a living.
Thoreau's supernatural qualities can be summated into four significant thoughts: 1) Appreciation of and Respect for Nature: Thoreau accepted that the industrialization that was happening in his time as an attack against nature, and that man expected to keep in contact with his characteristic roots so as to carry on with a full life.
Some critics feel that Alice's personality and her waking life are reflected in Wonderland; that may be the case. But the story itself is independent of Alice's "real world." Her personality, as it were, stands alone in the story, and it must be considered in terms of the Alice character in Wonderland.
A strong moral consciousness operates in all of Alice's responses to Wonderland, yet on the other hand, she exhibits a child's insensitivity in discussing her cat Dinah with the frightened Mouse in the pool of tears. Generally speaking, Alice's simplicity owes a great deal to Victorian feminine passivity and a repressive domestication. Slowly, in stages, Alice's reasonableness, her sense of responsibility, and her other good qualities will emerge in her journey through Wonderland and, especially, in the trial scene. Her list of virtues is long: curiosity, courage, kindness, intelligence, courtesy, humor, dignity, and a sense of justice. She is even "maternal" with the pig/baby. But her constant and universal human characteristic is simple wonder — something which all children (and the child that still lives in most adults) can easily identify with