1. The first impression of this story is afflicted, because the emotional changes of the storyteller compelled a strong argument about treating animals. The cooperation between them are cheerful and enjoying. However, when the monkey realized the author was there to utilize him for data, and then the author felt guilty for his strategies to Santiago. Eventually Santiago became unenthusiastic, he was playing the video for the juice.
Another important fact was that as Louie was traveling across the Pacific Ocean, his plane was shot down, and his pilot and he became stranded in the middle of the ocean for forty-seven days. Both the pilot and Louie survived, but they were captured and place into prison-of-war camps. Another important fact was that during Louie’s time in the prison-of-war camp, there had been a guard nicknamed the Bird, that punched Louie more than two hundred times and even made him clean pigpens with his bare hands just because he did not like
Tintin falls asleep for a short amount of time and wakes up to find the lifeboat on fire and Haddock drunk. When Tintin tries to extinguish the fire, Haddock gets angry and pushes Tintin, capsizing the boat. Suddenly, a seaplane attacks them with machine guns. Tintin takes a shot at the plane with a handgun which miraculously stops the engine and the pilots are forced to land on the water. As the pilots are fixing the plane Tintin and Haddock sneak up on them, hijack the plane after it is fixed, tie them up, and set course for Spain.
Louie on the verge of death alongside with Phil on the life raft, “Louie prayed. He had prayed only once before in his life in childhood, when his mother was sick and he had been filled with a rushing fear that he would lose her. That night on the raft, in words composed in his head, never passing his lips, he pleaded for help” (Hillenbrand 142). In the most desperate of times Louie asks for the best for himself as well as his crew. After being held captive for two years as a POW, Louie is left with a distorted mind that is filled with monstrous images.
travels with his mother to america on the S.S Hato, a cargo ship headed to america but is torpedoed Phillip is hit on the head with a plank and goes unconscious when he regains conscious he find that he is on a raft with a black man. The book vividly explains how Timothy looks, this is a negative connotation showing that Phillip immediately disliked him by his physical features. Timothy was being kind ,understanding that Phillip is not used to some people and will be upset from what he has gone through. Timothy tries to survive and catches fish for them to eat but since there is no fire to cook the fish they have to eat it raw, Phillip uses this to prove that they are “different”
Louie along with two other men survived the crash. The three men were stranded for forty-seven days. “Two weeks had passed. The men’s skin was burned, swollen, and cracked.. Their bodies were digesting themselves” (Hillenbrand 155); this quote expresses that the men are suffering with no food or water, their bodies are growing smaller by the day.
He and two other men drifted for forty-seven days, while suffering from extreme hunger and thirst, exposure to the elements, and attacks from sharks and enemy planes. Despite all odds, Louie and Phil Phillips survived the seemingly impossible journey due to their untouched senses of dignity. Although their bodies were severely deprived due to thirst and starvation, their minds remained healthy with dignity and confidence in survival. However, the third man on the raft, Mac McNamara was not able to keep up with the strong minds of Louie and Phil. Mac was pessimistic from the moment the plane went down, holding no hope for survival.
“Why did he leave us here?” “I guess we will have to wait and see.” Peter and I continued on about the day waiting to see a skiff on the horizon. We do this for a week, wanting him to come back. It feels lonely here since all we can talk about is when Garvey might return.
By using helplessness in the story, Richard Connell creates suspenseful situations. At the beginning of the story, Rainsford falls off the yacht and is left in the ocean. Nobody hears his cries for help, as they are “pinched off short as the bloodwarm waters of the Caribbean sea closed over his head”(15). While reading this, the reader feels the hopeless situation as they watch Rainsford struggle. The desperation is doubtless; the readers are hoping the yacht will notice he is gone and will come after him, but knowing that it probably will not.
During this time, Louie and two other crew members faced extreme conditions, including starvation, dehydration, and exposure to the elements while being lost at sea. In the novel it states, “He was a body on a raft, dying of thirst. He felt words whisper from his swollen lips. It was a promise thrown at heaven, a promise he had not kept. If you save me, I will serve you forever.
You want a flat story. An immobile story. You want dry, yeastless factuality” (Chapter 99). In addition, the occurrences that happened in this version of Pi’s story make it very difficult for Mr. Okamoto and Mr. Chiba to believe. Pi then tells them a second version of the story replacing all the animals for people.
What did the narrator do in light of his experience on the sailboat? Do you think his reaction is a typical one of someone facing their
Furthermore, the aspect of discovery can also be conveyed in a different ways. The fact that sometimes people, like myself, are being forced to find a new place which can result a negative and positive emotional impact, or future possibilities. In ‘The Little Refugee’, Bruce Whatley illustrates a small shabby boat jam-packed with worried people who are desperate to find new life and hope, whereas Hurley’s his discovery was being forced by his inner-life. Dull and grey-black smoky colours symbolize the overwhelming fear as seen through the body language of the people. And the dominance of the stormy clouds adds to the uncertainty, and the salience draws our eyes to the boat, helping us to easily relate to the terrifying encounters.
With no way to make repairs, the three men are left stranded with few resources. After a few days in this situation, The other two men get desperate, fighting each other to the death for the right to eat each other. Throughout the struggle, Prendick refuses to give in to his primal desire for food, staying as far as he can from the fight. In this instance, Prendick shows just how strong a moral code he has. Even in situations where he has seemingly no chance of survival, he does not compromise.
Ideally, standardized tests should be implemented to establish readiness and preparedness for the future and to assess a student’s comprehension of gained knowledge and growth over a certain learning period. However, this is far from what standardized tests in our country truly accomplish. In order to label a child as non-proficient, proficient, or advanced, test creators need to be able to craft a percentile-by-percentile ranking system to clearly separate and create a “considerable degree of score spread” (Popham, Edutopia). In other words, test designers need to create questions that only about 50 percent of students will answer correctly and the best way for developers to accomplish this clear ranking system is to generate questions that