English, asked by hardikacha, 10 months ago

spape or
What wives me
When
LESLES INTO PASSIVE VOICE
do I book
You read the lesson twice.
my tickets online ?
-20_MARKS
3. We understand oher feelings everytime
4. She never disabay her parents
who gives me &
What do you buy from the market every year
alt every bday
They usually their home work
Hocmon Spoons do you take with coockeries.
at home
be boys atten, watch movies in theatre -
Ashika usually opens the windows, ot the Slass
Sonia sells
le
twenty pictures every Sunday:
My Pother does not punish me
13. What can I do in the office ?
14Do_the students ask_ many questions
15. The magician does not teach us any megic,
Jemak crad Janki dank tea every morning
who plays coicket at home dallah
ke Howmucb_buttes do yoy Spa
edio onibheadi?
hexpresents erytime​

Answers

Answered by sar495
1

Answer:

The narrator

The unnamed narrator is an active character in the short story. Because the text was inspired by Hemingway’s real life experience in Spain as a war correspondent, we can assume the narrator is a fictional persona of the author. All that the text reveals about the narrator’s outer characterization is that his job was to “to cross the bridge, explore the bridgehead beyond and find out to what point the enemy had advanced” (ll. 9-11), which implies that he was a scout (an individual sent first to investigate a territory).

Inner characterization

The narrator’s inner characterization is constructed through dialogue, actions, and the way he depicts the events.

The way the narrator depicts the war setting and the old man suggests that he pities the situation of the Spanish and that he is against fascists and war in general: “…how long now it would be before we would see the enemy, and listening all the while for the first noises that would signal that ever mysterious event called contact, and the old man still sat there.” (ll. 26-29); “There was nothing to do about him. It was Easter Sunday and the Fascists were advancing toward the Ebro.” (ll. 71-72)

...

The old man

The old man is the second character in the short story, who is presented from the narrator’s perspective. According to his outer characterization, he comes from a town called San Carlos (l. 14), he is “seventy-six years old” (l. 42), he has no family, and he used to take care of animals.

His physical portrait is conveyed on several occasions, and helps suggest the idea of helplessness: “An old man with steel rimmed spectacles and very dusty clothes sat by the side of the road.” (ll. 1-2); “...I looked at his black dusty clothes and his gray dusty face and his steel rimmed spectacles…” (ll. 21-22)

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