Answer:
<u>page 41</u>
Explanation:
In the book<em> </em><em>"Night" </em>by Elie Wiesel, it tells us part of the life accounts of the experiences of Elie Wiesel and his father in the Nazi concentration camps in Germany from 1944–1945. Although not originally written in English, it was later translated into English.
The full quote from the version translated by Marion Wiesel on page 41 read;
<em>"Comrades, you are now in the concentration camp Auschwitz. Ahead of you lies a long road paved with suffering. Don't lose hope. You have already eluded the worst danger: the selection. Therefore, muster your strength and keep your faith. We shall all see the day of liberation. Have faith in life, a thousand times faith. By driving out despair, you will move away from death. Hell does not last forever… And now, here is a prayer, or rather a piece of advice: let there be camaraderie among you. We are all brothers and share the same fate. The same smoke hovers over all our heads. Help each other. That is the only way to survive."</em>
Answer:
Both passages deal with the same theme of the inevitability of death.
Explanation:
Both of the passages share the same theme of the inevitability of death.
"On Seeing the Elgin Stone", John Keats asserts the mortality of man and that death is something man or in any case, anyone can avoid. Likewise, William Wordsworth also emphasizes the inevitability of death in his poem "Ode on Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood". Both poets from the same Romantic period describes how things will all meet their end, even things that are believed to be immortal will eventually fade away.
What is the question about?
Answer:it represents the last room