Answer:
The given quote is spoken by Happy Loman in Death of a Salesman.
Explanation:
The given quote is said by Happy Loman in Arthur Miller's <em>Death of a Salesman</em>. The passage is from the last part of the book, the "Requim" after the death of Willy Loman, their father.
The book deals with the life of Willy Loman, a salesman who works on accepting his identity amidst the change in himself and the society. The given quote of Happy reveals his determination to become a better salesman, becoming <em>"number one man",</em> winning it for his dead father.
Answer:
B. He claims that the war is about the war is about the ideals of the nation, and whether a country founded on those ideals can survive
Explanation:
If we go through the answer choices one-by-one we'll see that
1. A isn't the answer because the war wasn't a positive experience many people died. wives lost their husbands, children were orphaned, the losses were heavy.
2. C isn't the correct answer because the war didn't happen a long time ago he presented the speech during the civil war and 4 months "after the Union armies defeated those of the Confederacy at the Battle of Gettysburg"
3. D isn't the the correct answer because he never insisted the war shouldn't have been fought and he doesn't blame anyone the speech actually talks about standing up and fighting for our rights
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“'This Has Always Been Our Active Shooter Drill' is a poem that comments on the dissonance between the active shooter drills children all over America are forced to carry out in the event of a school shooter and the often futile drill that black parents execute with their children