Answer:
Robert Burns and John Steinbeck are two authors who brilliantly <u>capture the disappointment that follows failed plans</u>.
Robert Burns' poem, 'To a Mouse' was the inspiration for the title behind John Steinbeck's 1937 novella, Of Mice and Men. Set in the 1930s during the Great Depression, Steinbeck plays on Burns' idea of <u>shattered dreams and failed plans through the characters of this classic work</u>.
Answer:
Explanation:
Without knowing nothing of the man I can picture him by imagining the importance of being hungry mentally. ¨Stay foolish¨ is more ambigious to me; in the sence of preserving certain <em>¨childish¨ and ingenuous aspects </em>or maybe more like believing in things that the world as such considers to be <em>¨foolish¨.</em>
<em>¨Without deviation from the norm progress is not possible¨ </em>pops up in my mind. The phrase is by Frank Zappa and it summons up my belief - and maybe also that of Steve Jobs - that, although the whole world considers you a fool, you might be right in your mental deviation.
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Deep in the Antartic wastelands, within one of the numerous penguin colonies there was a penguin who was different. He did not look like the other penguins; he did not think like other penguins. He was an anomaly. For a start, he wore horned-rimmed glasses that he found lying on the wreckage of an ancient whaling ship that floundered and was stuck in the ice close to where he lived. All the other penguins mocked him for wearing glasses. What they did not know, was that he loved reading the books found on the whaling ship. <span>
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I believe the answer is A