The following line says that he wants the narrator to "repeat" and thinks that something had "miscarried"
This seems to indicate that the Grand Lunar thinks something is wrong (a problem).
The underlined phrase says "cooling upon his brow" which means that the Grand Lunar is sweating (?) possibly in anger when you consider the lines after.
Considering the context in the image, he Grand Lunar is probably not in bad health, nor is he confused
What I do is I put in my earbuds and listen to music. It helps me and I don't go off task. If that doesn't help then try setting an alarm on your phone for 30 minutes read till that alarm goes off then take a 5 or 10 minute break then go back to reading for another 30 minutes. Hope this helps :)
The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "Taking responsibility means that having a sense of responsibility is being willing to admit one's fault when the planned things are not in place. Each action has consequence that entails on it."
In the poems, “I Ask My Mother to Sing” and “The Negro Speaks of Rivers” the poets expresses their appreciations for the culture and history they belong to.
Both the poems highlights the importance of remembering the nationality that people belong to. The poems presents the theme of love towards the culture and language to which they are associated to. Living in the foreign place shall not be the reason of forgetting the culture and place to which an individual belong to.
In the poem “I Ask My Mother to Sing”, the poet is a Chinese American who have never visited China. His love for his country has flourished in the foreign country as well. He asks his mother and grandmother to sing the song of his country. This song helps him to connect with his land and feel its presence even in the foreign place.
In the poem “The Negro Speaks of Rivers”, Langston Huges speaks of the black cultural identity that he and his people has incorporated in themselves. The poem highlights the historical importance of the African race. Living in the foreign world has not dissociated the people from tehir culture and identity.
Scrooge's father is considerably more generous in the movie, leaving Scrooge meager amounts of money, while in the book, the poor lad is sent straight to a new Master named Fezziwig. In the movie Scrooge seems much younger than he actually is; in the book, he is around 70, weaker and frail.