The Holocaust affected Europe in several different ways, including the impact on families across Europe and the permanent change in how people perceive a Communist government
That’s just one example, it just depends on what your sources are mainly talking about and have those as your main points
Sum, because it is addition.
5.11
There isn't much of a conventional setting in this poem, unless you consider the vague concept of "apocalypse" or the "end of the world" to be a setting.
but, "fire and Ice" starts off with two images of the end of the world. In the first image, the world is a great bubbling mess of fire, lava, and explosions. cities are melting and trees are burning. In the second vision, the world is an ice cube/a ice sphere. a extremely large cloud looms above the earth, and temperatures are so low that life cannot survive.
from there we move to a discussion from the speaker- we now have the image of him "tasting" desire, like Eve biting into the fateful apple in the Garden of Eden. then he rewinds the end of the world somehow, as if this were a film.
In the second apocalypse, things run different. Ice carries the day, driven by the hatred of people.
Answer:
A golf ball rolling slowly down a gentle slope.
Is there any option for this? Or is it a true or false question?