It seems that you have missed the necessary options for us to answer this question so I had to look for it. Anyway, here is the answer. In Ernest Hemingway’s “In Another Country,” what worries the narrator about going back to the front is that h<span>e is worried his injury will interfere with his ability to fight. Hope this helps.</span>
Honestly, I would guess C. The author compares grief to a wet mop to show that when the time for grieving ends, each person must let go of it on his or her own.
Answer:
The correct answer is option A. He is a wanderer.
Explanation:
Referring to the book <em>"Heart of Darkness."</em>, we have a narrator named Charlie Marlow.
The main narrator describes him as someone similar to Buddha. He is someone who sees beyond what he really has in front. <u>He is not a simple seaman like the others</u>. He is an honest and intelligent person, detached from everything material.
The narrator even says it explicitly in the lines <em>“But Marlow was not typical, and to him the meaning of an episode was not inside like a kernel but outside ...”</em> and also <em>“He did not represent his class”.
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The main narrator says that unlike the others seaman, Marlow did not lead a sedentary life, but was a wanderer. The way he told his story was very different from the simple way others did it.
Just because something is between quotes, it doesn't mean it has to start in capital letters unless it is a name.
Answer:
D.
Hope it helped,
Happy homework/ study/ exam!