Asked by berlanda
Read the excerpt from chapter 7 of Night.
Our minds numb with indifference. Here or elsewhere, what did it matter? Die today or tomorrow, or later? The night was growing longer, never-ending.
What does the sentence "The night was growing longer, never-ending” suggest about the author’s viewpoint?
He no longer cares about what happens to him.
He believes that life in general is too hard to endure.
He feels like the horrors he is experiencing will last forever.
He believes that bad things happen only at night.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
"He feels like the horrors he is experiencing will last forever."
This line conveys a sense of ongoing, unending suffering and despair rather than just indifference, a general hardship view, or a literal belief that bad things happen only at night.
This line conveys a sense of ongoing, unending suffering and despair rather than just indifference, a general hardship view, or a literal belief that bad things happen only at night.
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