“I thought it was empty....an empty house”.
Q. Who is ‘I’ here?
“I thought it was empty....an empty house”.
Q. Why does ‘I’ enter the house?
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“What have you changed the subject for? People always do that. Why don’t you ask me? Why do you do what they all do and pretend it isn’t true and isn’t there?”
Q. Which subject was being talked about?
“What have you changed the subject for? People always do that. Why don’t you ask me? Why do you do what they all do and pretend it isn’t true and isn’t there?”
Q. What do people do when they look at Derry?
“What have you changed the subject for? People always do that. Why don’t you ask me? Why do you do what they all do and pretend it isn’t true and isn’t there?”
Q. Who is the speaker?
“What have you changed the subject for? People always do that. Why don’t you ask me? Why do you do what they all do and pretend it isn’t true and isn’t there?”
Q. Who changed the subject and why?
“But you can put on trousers and cover it up and no one sees, they don’t have to notice and stare.”
Q. Why do children call ‘you’ Lamey–Lamb?
“But you can put on trousers and cover it up and no one sees, they don’t have to notice and stare.”
Q. How does ‘you’ respond?
“But you can put on trousers and cover it up and no one sees, they don’t have to notice and stare.”
Q. Who is ‘you’ conversing with?
“But you can put on trousers and cover it up and no one sees, they don’t have to notice and stare.”
Q. In what context does the speaker say these words?
“So you will. But the world won’t. The world’s got a whole face, and the world’s there to be looked at.”
Q. Who is ‘you’ here?
“So you will. But the world won’t. The world’s got a whole face, and the world’s there to be looked at.”
Q. Who gives this reply?
“So you will. But the world won’t. The world’s got a whole face, and the world’s there to be looked at.”
Q. From which lesson these have been taken?
“So you will. But the world won’t. The world’s got a whole face, and the world’s there to be looked at.”
Q. What problem is ‘you‘ talking about?
“And think of all those people worse off than you. Think, you might have been blinded, or born deaf, or have to live in a wheelchair, or be daft in your head and dribble.”
Q. How have people been sermonizing to Derry about his burnt face?