It is false that reading a play rather than seeing it takes away all of its entertainment value. Both reading and seeing a play can be very entertaining, it has nothing to do with the medium.
Answer:
<em>Resolution:</em> Dorothy dumped a bucket of water onto the Witch and she melted. <u><em>Conflict:</em></u>The wizard turned out to be a fake and just a normal man so he couldn't grant magical wishes. Resolution: He was still able to give the scarecrow a brain, the Tin Woodman a heart and the cowardly lion courage without magic.
Explanation:
The central theme of “The Weary Blues” concerns the resilience of the archetypal “common” person who has times of despair or despondency. Music serves as a means of relieving pain or anxiety. The poem transcends the limitations of race, as all people have used music and poetry as a means of getting through bad times. The cause of the blues singer’s sense of isolation, loneliness, pain, and trouble is deliberately vague. His inability to identify the exact cause of his trials and tribulations, or the narrator’s unwillingness to speculate upon it, enhances the universality of those feelings. The unspoken but evident complexity of the interrelationship between the player and his piano and the narrator and the musician corresponds to the complexity and interrelatedness of musical and poetic traditions. The poem, in its unconventional thematic and formal structure, advocates an equal acceptance of the two.
The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "first-person or third-person omniscient." If the story "Two Kinds" had been told through Suyuan's point of view, the type of narration that would be appropriate is that first-person or third-person omniscient.