A fearful trip. Answer found in the poem O Captain! My Captain! by Walt Whitman, where the captain is Abraham Lincoln and the fearful trip is the civil war.
Answer:
First Muir described how he slept sometimes without supper, and then he says he had no difficulty finding a loaf of bread at the farmers' houses. He starts of the paragraph with a complaint of sleeping without blankets, and starts to transition again into nature and its beauty. In the paragraph, Muir says "Storms, thunderclouds, winds in the woods—were welcomed as friends;" when we hear storms, thunderclouds, winds, etc. it brings fear, damage, but Muir then says "were welcomed as friends."
Answer and Explanation:
1. In short, the texts claim that people overcome adversity with resilience. However, resilience is difficult to understand. The texts show how the word "resilience" has become fashionable in recent years, but few people really know them, because very few people needed it.
2. Resilience allows people to face reality, realize that they cannot change it, but have positivity. Positivity is very difficult to establish in a time of adversity, but it must be encouraged, as it shows that this moment will pass and that it is necessary to be strong to pass it.
The tone of Emily’s speeches in Act III are generally regretful, sad, and sometimes urgent, while Simon Stinson’s tone is rather bitter. In her speech she describes her regret not being in her grave, representing the idea of <span>ignorance and blindness of the people's world. Simon Stinson expresses annoying reaction, but he approves her words and sharply replies that now she understands how cruel and unfair is the world.</span>