The setting of the story "The Prisoner Who Wore Glasses" is a South African prison during apartheid. It follows the interactions between two prisoners, one being the young activist who defies the prison authorities, and the other being an older political prisoner who wears glasses and teaches the younger man about resistance and sacrifice.
hyperbole the prisoner who wore glasses
The Prisoner who wore glasses has more than two themes. But the most important theme is about race discrimination. Here we found Hannetjie discriminating Brille. He called him a 'Kaffir' and expected Brille to call him 'Baas'. He then uttered words like: ''what kind of 'kaffir' you tink you are''
The irony in the prisoner who wore glasses was that his vision was actually very poor, and he didn't wear them to read or see better. Rather, he needed them as a fire starter - he used the lenses to focus sunlight and ignite his surroundings, showing that appearances can be deceiving.
she wore prescription glasses
Abraham Lincoln did NOT wear glasses. At age 47, he began wearing glasses to read, only, which is a perfectly normal occurrence at this age. His wife also wore glasses, but after her sight wore out.
Who doesn't know that? Of course he did!!! That is what he is famous for!!!
Doc
Ronnie
It was Simon.
Arthur..? I think the cat (Miss Kitty?) on Mr Roger's neighborhood wore glasses, too, but it was a puppet.
george mikan, the basketball legend who made basketball a nationally recognized sport. he wore thick glasses for his nearsightedness
John Lennon wore round glasses