Answer:
a "stifling world of his parents and peers, a world of abstraction and security and material excess".
Explanation:
"Into The Wild", by Jon Krakueur, tells the story of a twenty year old man named Christopher McCandless. He had just graduated from college where he studied Law. Instead of pursuing and advancing his career in Law, McCandless chooses a path which is somewhat strange. He begins his journey taking the western route and later moving north to Alaska.
He undertakes this journey because he believed that the present world which he lived in and was trying to escape from was 'stifling and reeked of material excesses'. The kind of life he now chooses to live is best described as an Ascetic life only that in his case, he does not go the spiritual route. As he begins his journey, he takes along with him books about edible wild plants and thriving in a lifestyle such as he has chosen.
Water once or twice per week, using enough water to moisten the soil to a depth of about 6 inches each time. It's okay if the soil's surface dries out between waterings, but the soil beneath should remain moist.
Seems to me the answer is.
"Every mouthful of food was an acute positive pleasure, now that it was truly their own food, produces by themselves and for themselves, not doled out to them by a grudging master".
maybe...it seems it to me though.
Answer:
Girl how is your hair so beautiful
Explanation:
"In a Station of the Metro" (1913) by Ezra Pound creates an imagery that compares the human faces with the flower petals. Through the connecting image the poet links cycle of nature with the urban life. The movement of the human in the subway is linked with that of a tree that they are continuously moving, changing and growing. As when the rain or winter arrives the petals of the flower doesn’t look same, as the new bud groom. Similarly, people in the metro are there for a short glimpse at the door of the metro closes, a new group of people arrives in the next metro.