Part I
The text structure is how the text is organized. Text structures include most of the time compare and contrast, sequence, description, problem and solution, and cause and effect. The text structure is one of the most important parts of a text. Some examples of a text structures are the sequence structure, which sorts out the text according to the order of the steps in a process or the chronological order of the events of the stories. And the problem and solution text structure, which presents a problem and then tries finding a solution and its consequences.
Part II
In the consistent text structure in the story "To Build a fire" the author consistently develops the northern theme in his work. cause-and-effect relationships are important for the author, he is interested in the psychology of the main character, the motives of his actions and the internal sources of forces for resistance. In "Gumption" the descriptive structure makes it easier for the author to emphasize actions and reveal how can each person of foolish decisions contribute to its downfall. they both tell a story of someone that is suffering. in "To Build a fire" he has to survive out in the wilderness, and in "gumption" they have to deal with racism.
Part III
The story "Gumption" has a descriptive structure, because it describes an idea. In the story, the author makes the reader understand Clara's individual interpretation of "Gumption" by depicting it to the reader. But in "To build a fire" the author uses a sequential structure (the ideas are presented as they happen in time) and it shows the reader how each one of the man's unintelligent decisions plays a part in his undoing.
Answer:
C. The new generation of United States’ citizens will continue to fight for freedom
Explanation:
This is the excerpt from John F. Kennedy's 1961 Inaugural address.
In its fourth paragraph, Kennedy reminds the US citizens that they are the heirs of those men who fought for their rights and freedom in the Revolution for Independence. He also uses the "torch that has been passed on to them" as a metaphor for continuing the fight for the same values their ancestors fought for, before concluding that they will not permit the undoing of those rights, to which they are committed, not only in the USA, but all over the world.
This, basically, can be summarized into this: new generations of US citizens will continue the fight of those before them, in preserving freedom, not only at home, but wherever it's needed in the world.