Grenville is portrayed as the father of a dead child to symbolize the profound loss and emotional burden that accompanies the consequences of colonialism and conflict. This characterization evokes empathy and highlights the themes of grief and the impact of historical events on personal lives. It serves to illustrate the broader human cost of political actions, emphasizing that behind every statistic or historical narrative lies individual tragedy and suffering. This portrayal invites reflection on the interconnectedness of personal and collective histories.
if father dead, you need custody of child
you poor soul
an orphan.
orphan
An orphan is a child who's mother and father are dead.
The child is praying, but at the end is saying goodbye to a family member, who then ends up dead the next day. The father is worried by this, and is especially worried when one night the child says "Ta ta, father". He thinks he will be the next to die. However it is the milkman who is found dead the next morning, the implication is that the child's mother was unfaithful and the milkman is the child's true father, rather than the father in the joke.
Normally yes, unless there is a legal restriction preventing him from doing it
orphan
Absolutely. The child is a product of the union between the biological mother and father regardless of how long they were together. He needs to provide for his innocent child.
Death benefits, no - the child isn't dead yet. Survivor's benefits, yes - once the father established legal custody.
Yes, Theodore Roosevelt had a father. Everyone has a father regardless of living or dead, married or divorced. It takes a male and a female to make a child.
Yes,the dead beat is expected to pay up.