Khalil’s shooting and the ongoing investigation of Officer Cruise put the theme of injustice at the forefront of the novel. The fact that Khalil was unarmed and did not threaten the officer makes his murder unjust. The police are unjust at other points, too, such as when they force Maverick to the ground and pat him down. Race is tied into this theme of injustice as well, since pervasive racism prevents African-Americans from obtaining justice. Starr and Maverick in particular are focused on bringing justice not only for Khalil but also for African-Americans and other oppressed groups, such as the poor. The activist group that Starr joins is called Just Us for Justice because it fights against police maltreatment on the basis of race. At the end of the novel, Starr accepts that injustice might continue but reinforces her determination to fight against it.
Since the father likes taking risks in a game, he might like taking risks in life as well.
<span>D. The father is playing chess with the son, but the son is not old enough to know th</span>
Answer:
b) an American lieutenant who volunteers for the Italian ambulance corps.
Explanation:
The Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway tells the story of a US lieutenant, Frederic Henry, who served in the Italian army during World War I as an ambulance driver. The novel unfolds around his tragic passion for an English nurse. It is a romance of love and suffering, of loyalty and desertion.
The American Frederick Henry goes to Italy during the First World War, looking for work as a war correspondent, but ends up becoming an ambulance driver with the lieutenant's insignia. On the eve of an Italian offensive against the Austrian army, he meets English Red Cross aide Catherine Barkley and they fall in love. Henry is wounded in the ensuing battle and is taken to the American hospital in Milan.
Thanks to their Italian friends, the two meet again at the hospital and stay together during Henry's recovery. Catherine gets pregnant but does not want to get married. Henry is forced to return to his unit. He comes back in a difficult time, when the Germans can force the Italians to retreat (Battle of Caporetto). During the ensuing chaos, his official friend and doctor Alessandro Rinaldi is shot by the Italian soldiers themselves, which causes Henry to leave the army. He returns to Catherine and the two escape to Switzerland.
In Donne's sonnet, the phrase "one short sleep past" means: Death, like a nap, isn't permanent. I can assure that option D is correct.
In fact, the lines after that mentioned in the questions are: we wake eternally
And death shall be no more; Death, thou shalt die.
Which confirms that for the author, the death is not permanent or eternal, on the contray, life is, so we will wake eternal and death would die.