The author of “ A Fateful Journey ” decides to include some details and sees fit to ... details out that are included in the historical account: “ Moving To America ”. T.. ... The historical account then goes on to describing the condition of the ship, ... In, “ Moving To America, ” it opens up about the harsh reality faced by immigrants, ...
1. helping
2. playing
3. singing and dancing
4. seeing
5. driving
6. listening
7. moving
8. joining
9. carrying
10. getting
Answer:
Symbolism, Imagery, Allegory. This play doesn't mess around much with itty-bitty bits of symbolism.
Explanation:Narrator Point of View
<u>The mood of this passage is GLOOMY AND MELANCHOLY.</u>
The prevailing emotion or mood found in the excerpt is gloomy/melancholy. This is clear when we pay attention to the author's approach to the main character and the overall setting: the character wakes up in impenetrable "blackness", there's no sound but the wind in the "blackened trees", he stood on a "cold autistic dark", and so on and so forth. All the setting is filled with darkness, there is nothing that evokes to something cheerful or enjoyable and the character is pensive in the middle of all that.
The fact that Beethoven wrote that song beautifully and was deaf is very inspiring. It proves that even the helpless can achieve the impossible.