Answer:
Henry Fleming - The novel’s protagonist; a young soldier fighting for the Union army during the American Civil War. Initially, Henry stands untested in battle and questions his own courage. As the novel progresses, he encounters hard truths about the experience of war, confronting the universe’s indifference to his existence and the insignificance of his own life. Often vain and holding extremely romantic notions about himself, Henry grapples with these lessons as he first runs from battle, then comes to thrive as a soldier in combat.
Jim Conklin - Henry’s friend; a tall soldier hurt during the regiment’s first battle. Jim soon dies from his wounds, and represents, in the early part of the novel, an important moral contrast to Henry.
Explanation:I just got that write.
Makhaya ran from South
Africa, he did not want to start a family there because of how people were treated. they did no have
freedom or their rights were not guarantee. <span>
<span>Due to what he suffered in his country, now he is a refugee
and he is not able to trust anyone. But this conditions changes because he
means well to other people in Golema Mmidi so he starts to be social and help
them,</span></span>
Answer:
Let us begin with the Three Little Pigs. It is written in the third person in The Three Little Pigs. In The Three Little Pigs, the Big Bad Wolf purposefully blew down the homes of the three little pigs. The Big Bad Wolf seems to be really guilty in The Three Little Pigs. In this tale, the wolf desired to devour the three little pigs. Another distinction is that the Big Bad Wolf ends up on the dinner table of the third little pig! In The Three Little Pigs, the illustrator depicts the pigs purchasing building supplies.
Anne Sullivan, while describing her struggle to work with a young Helen Keller, wrote, "...the more I think, the more certain I am that obedience is the gateway through which knowledge, yes, and love, too, enters the mind of the child."