Answer:
A person in my life that displays integrity is my mom. She is always looking out for others and is always putting others before herself. No matter what I can also count on my mom for something, even if it's picking me up for toothpaste. She's a very reliable and trustworthy person.
Explanation:
Answer:
The culture in "Black Ships Before Troy" caused a hero to be seen as a traitor, while in "Heart of a Samurai" the culture almost prevented a hero from appearing.
Explanation:
"Black Ships Before Troy" presents a people with a culture very based on religion, where they believed that all the events that happened were due to the action of the gods. Good events were because the gods were happy, while bad events were caused by the wrath of the gods. In this case, when a hero tried to stop the horse sent to Troy and ended up dying before completing his mission, he was seen as a traitor who was rebuked by the gods.
In contrast, "Heart of a Samurai" shows how a boy who dreamed of being a samurai was prevented because his family was made up of fishermen and the culture said that young people should follow their parents' tragedy.
Answer:
The excerpt from the poem that suggests the inevitability of the result Okonkwo fears is "The ceremony of innocence is drowned; "
Explanation:
The biggest fear of Okonkwo is to see the traditions and beliefs as well as the kind of life that mane ancestors preserved in African villages doomed because of modernization and influence of cities and the new kind of life, the sentence "The ceremony of innocence is drowned " talks about how this invasion is destroying everything that was natural and sacred.
<span>Which poets address it in terms of the times they live in (and its threat of fascism) and which address it in a more personal way?
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Answer: First we should know that both of these poet's had a bad experience in their lives, suffering similarly under tyranny and oppression during World War II, which shaped their perspective in very different ways. Milosz is the one that took it very personally and considered his life as emotionally destroyed while Szymborska looked at it as another chance at life that might never be given again. It is clear that the poet that addresses death in terms of the times they live in and as a threat of fascism is Milosz. This is apparent in the poem “City Without A Name”.
I hope this helps, Regards.