Answer:
Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses, Honorable members of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, Excellencies, Ladies and gentlemen.
I have a purpose here today. It is a purpose I have tried to serve for many years. I have prayed that God would show me a way to accomplish it.
Sometimes, without warning, the future knocks on our door with a precious and painful vision of what might be. One hundred and nineteen years ago, a wealthy inventor read his own obituary, mistakenly published years before his death. Wrongly believing the inventor had just died, a newspaper printed a harsh judgment of his life’s work, unfairly labeling him “The Merchant of Death” because of his invention – dynamite. Shaken by this condemnation, t he inventor made a fateful choice to serve the cause of peace.
Seven years later, Alfred Nobel created this prize and the others that bear his name.
Answer:
the argument or suggestions that he is making it that civilians can honor the dead only by honoring and helping out their families.
The answer is this statement:
<span>Perhaps it was these desperate, bitter men in the
West Stand at Arsenal who taught me how to get angry in this way; and perhaps
it is why I earn some of my living as a critic - maybe it's those voices l can
hear when I write.</span>
<span>War is kind is definitely all about a war. The
title is an irony what really a war is. The real thing is that war is very
unkind and is happening always because there people who send soldiers to wars
not thinking about their deaths. On the other hand, The Colored soldiers is a
poem to praise black men who served the Army during the civil war. These
soldiers fight for freedom from slavery even though they know the risks of
their actions and that it may cause them harm.</span>