The writer of "The Instinct that Makes People Rich" interprets the Midas myth as the story of a man who could not fail.
Chesterton, however, says that Midas DID fail. He starved because he could not eat gold.
Chesterton says that success always comes at the sacrifice of something else, something "domestic." (By this he means that, yes, a millionaire has money but will lack something else, like love or friendship, etc.) He says that people who think Midas succeeded are just like the author of the article -- both worship money.
Chesterton says that worshipping money has nothing to do with success and everything to do with snobbery.
A parallel that can be traced about the excerpt from Enrique's Journey that appears in the book Children of the Drug Wars by author Damon Barett and the information about migrating without the parents of Central America to North America is that the abandonment of these children by part of their parents or guardians is a great motivation for them not to return to their country of origin but to keep going north. The escape of a violent past and abandonment with the parents serves as an incentive for these children to travel to the north of the American continent
The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "T<span>here are no excerpts shown or presented but the story is all about staying true to one’s cultural heritage and the adopting new practices in a foreign land. If we are exposed on a specific kind of culture, we are surely be affected especially on our identity. It will just make something that contradicts what we believe in."</span>
Answer:
It shows the feeling of pride in her family and culture.
Explanation:
Sonia Maria Sotomayor was the first Latina Justice of the US Supreme Court. Her speech "A Latina Judge's Voice" reveals her life and struggles that she'd gone through to become who she is today.
In the given excerpt from her speech, she talks of her immigrant parents, and how grateful she was for the upbringing her parents gave her and her brother. She also proudly declared <em>"The story of that success is what made me and what makes me the Latina that I am. The Latina side of my identity was forged and closely nurtured by my family through our shared experiences and traditions."</em> By emphasizing her <em>"Latina"</em> blood and heritage, Justice Sotomayor <u>expressed her deep feeling of pride in her family's background and culture.</u>
<em><u>Answer:</u></em>
- How does the narrator deal with the disappointment of unfulfilled promises?
<u><em>Explanation:</em></u>
Maureen Daly utilizes a first-person narrator in "Sixteen." As the story starts, the storyteller, who is the hero, makes a huge effort to tell the peruser that she is common in a teenaged kind of way.
She comprehends what the most recent styles are, she pursues the present articles and tunes in to the radio. She needs you to realize that she isn't only a senseless young lady.
When she adventures out to the skating arena on a virus winter night, she portrays the magnificence of the stars, the moon, the crunchy snow, and the sounds at the arena. It appears that she is an instinctive, nitty gritty situated, young lady by they way she introduces herself and thinks about her things. She puts her shoes off the beaten path in the skate shack to protect them. She is an objective mastermind.