Choose one answer.
a. anxious and tense
b. humorous and ironic
c. moralistic and rigid
d. serious and instructive
Answer:
C
Explanation:
the answer is He avoided blame for his actions.
-M4GUS
A. has want
B. wants
C. want
D. have wanted
Answer:
In this sermon, versions of which King had preached as early as 1954, King laments that “too many of our white brothers are concerned merely about the length of life rather than the breadth of life.”1 He suggests that with reordered priorities “the jangling discords of the South would be transformed into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood.” King’s theme and content reflect the influence of abolitionist minister Phillips Brooks’s sermon “The Symmetry of Life.”2 After this morning sermon, King traveled to Boston to deliver “The Future of Integration” at the Ford Hall Forum. The following transcript was drawn from an audio recording.