What or where is the passage?
<span>Struggles with his decision to kill the old man.
The premise of the poem revolves around the narrator's confliction over killing the man because although the man has been nothing but good to him, the strange blue eye "haunts" and annoys him.</span>
1. Did you know that Marcus is getting married on July 26th?
2. Wow! That is a great idea! I'd love to join, but I have a softball tournament that day.
3. Uncle Carl said that we would like you to come to the reunion, but my mom told him that we would not be able to make it.
4. Go to the hardware store and get the following items: a saw, a hammer and some rope.
5. The invitation said for you to go to 117 Donner Creek Road, in Fresno, but Sinclair couldn't find that address.
6. Because I had a dentist appointment at 1:30 pm, I had to leave school early.
7. The story, 'Out In the Woods,' is one of my favorites.
8. Bernice, my sister's best friend, is giving us a ride to school.
9. Most of the students passed the history test about Mexico, therefore, we are going to move onto a different topic.
10. When Trisha saw the boys on stage, she exclaimed, "Finally! A group of students that can act!"
In "A Raisin in the Sun" shows Mama's dream someday of having her own little garden at the back of her own house. Though she's close at quitting and giving up her dream, nurturing her plants simply implies that she's not giving up her dream, herself and of course, her children as well.
Both the painting and the written description depict a scene where both sides of the conflict seem completely confused as to the real reason for what it turned out to be a deadly confrontation.
The written account elaborates somewhat methodically the actions that led, step by step to the escalation of what originally was nothing but an argument between a soldier or sentry and a robe maker. The perennial curiosity of the nearby masses and the somewhat well established intransigence of law enforcement individuals clashed drastically and led to a tragic result that could've been easily avoided if cooler heads had prevailed. The depiction of the man in charge of the soldiers as a man not fit for the job seems to confirm the fact that a more disciplined superior would've been able to restrain his forces until the situation or issue at stake was clarified among the quarreling parties.
Finally, the painting only depicts the firing of the lined up soldiers against a revolting crowd on the other side but provides no clues as to what was the reason that led to the moment being depicted when the bayonets are being fired at short range in a firing squad like manner.