He is beginning to realize that he is afraid to die.
Answer: He feels like the horrors he is experiencing will last forever.
Explanation:
"Night" is Elie Wiesel's book in which he shares his experience in Nazi concentration camps (Auschwitz and Buchenwald) during the Second World War. The narrator of the story is Eliezer, a Jewish teenager.
The above-mentioned sentence suggests that the time passes slowly. Given the setting of the story, it is not surprising that the narrator has lost track of the time due to all the hardships that he went through. He feels that there is no end to the horrors in which he found himself.
The correct option is this: Young children are not allowed to borrow books on their own.
From the above excerpt, we can see that the writer is a young child who loves to read. Mrs Long usually ask her the books she desires to read and when she mentioned them, Mrs long will go to the town library, to get the books for her.
Mrs Long has to do this because children are not giving the privilege of borrowing books.
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Answer:
The dreariness of the speaker’s life away from Innisfree.
Explanation:
The lines 'While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements grey, I hear it in the deep heart’s core' refer to a feeling of closeness to and remembrance of a place dear to the speaker’s heart. There is an implicit sense of removal, of physical distance, contrasted to an emotional proximity.
So we know it reflects his life away from the idyllic Innisfree. Futhermore, the general tone of the phrase, the depiction of the pavements' colour (rather a dull one), appear to suggest a certain general dreariness.