In his inaugural address, John F. Kennedy explains specifically how he plans to honor his promise that the United States will do everything it takes to uphold liberty in nations across the world. In the following paragraphs he states clearly that the country will help those "struggling to break the bonds of mass misery" not to compete against the communists or to lure voters but because it is the right thing to do. He also offers a special pedge to the sisters nations south of the United States "to convert our good words into good deeds" to fight poverty. Moreover, he addresses the adversary nations with a request of peace. Therefore, this inaugural address is a pledge of peace and liberty.
I believe the answer is true
The lines that describe
this puzzling ability in the speaker's beloved to control his reasoning
faculties are “Whence hast thou this becoming of things ill,/That in the very
refuse of thy deeds/There is such strength and warrantise of skill,/That, in my
mind, thy worst all best exceeds?”
<span>In Shakespeare’s 150th
sonnet the puzzling ability is described as the capacity to make bad things look
good in her and to perform the most worthless actions so skillfully that the
speaker thinks that her worst is better than anyone else’s best.</span>
Answer:The overall tone of the passage is formal.
Explanation:edge2021