In his comedy "Poor Harold", Floyd Dell presents in a one act play depicts the adversity of Harold who wrote letters to a married woman without knowing that she was fond of having affairs despite being married.
In this excerpt from "Poor Harold.” the author represents all the bitterness, shame and some sort of resentment Harold has in his heart. By reading sentences like : "how was I to know that a rather plain-featured woman I sat next to...was conducting a dozen love-affairs?" we can see that Poor Harold is fulled with bitterness.
So the final Answer is:
Bitterness
Are they your Uncles
My cousin is on the chair
She isn't my grandmother
Is my aunt in the park
The writer is in the hospital
She is a good student
They aren't bakers
hope this helps
have a good day :)
Answer:
The author couldn't follow his dreams because of the job market failure. He was an English major and wanted to be a writer but couldn't get the job. He tried for several months to get a job with no luck until he heard about an opening in a newspaper business. Nobody wanted the job so he took it. He didn't believe he could be a reporter because he never thought about it before. He wanted to write, not ask questions.
The failure of the job market shaped a motivator externally in the short story. If the job market was thriving, he would have probably found a writing job somewhere else instead of the reporter job he took. He would have never found his true passion for reporting with the failure.
Notice the Irony?
I would go with:
Refers to an argument based on false or exaggerated information about the losing argument
Answer:
Both immediate and longer term industry responses to the security failures related to transportation showed
that various security holes existed between businesses in transportation chains from all modes and that many
transportation businesses were unaware of how other links in their chain handled safety issues, or if they did at all.
The regulation concerns areas that present safety concerns and may cause loss of life.
The inability of players in transportation chains to identify who was handling safety issues and how they were handling them
highlights a need for clarification of duties and roles within the industry.
The
investigation of the 9/11 events have further highlighted widespread and serious security flaws in the transportation
industry, such as the lack of regulation of flight schools and the use of water transportation to ship potentially lethal
items such as explosives. Unfortunately, the various security precautions that have placed a financial burden on
transportation companies change frequently and are often ineffective.