Pretty sure it’s contemplative
Answer:
Explanation:
Like many of Frost's poems, 'Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening' deals with the contemplation of nature. Many readers debate about whether or not the tone of the poem is calm and serene or dark and depressing.
The speaker in the poem is traveling at night through the snow and pauses with his horse near the woods by a neighbor's house to watch the snow falling around him. His horse shakes his harness bells, questioning the pause; perhaps this place isn't on their usual route, or he is curious that there doesn't appear to be a farmhouse nearby. The speaker continues to stand near the woods, attracted by the deep, dark silence of his surroundings. He feels compelled to move further into the snowy woods, but he ultimately decides to continue, concluding with perhaps the most famous lines of the poem: 'But I have promises to keep, and miles to go before I sleep, and miles to go before I sleep.'
The author of the story is implicating that this person is a “hard lump of clay” or a “hard glinty coal” in the sentenc. Notice how in both of these examples they mention the word hard, and an object that is dull. They <em>could</em> be saying that this person was hard to befrend, talk to or whatever the content is and that they seem like a dull person.
For example, let’s call them Henry.
”Henry was a hard person to get to know, he was always very dull.”
Answer:
A symbol
Explanation:
In the poem "Song of the Open Road," the road can best be described as a symbol. The road in this poem represents life, and the spiritual journey that people go through during their lifetime. Whitman wants the reader to imagine all of life's possibilities when thinking of the wide, free, open road, and make their own choices so that they are able to design their own lives without anyone else deciding for them.
Answer:
Well. let's see.
Explanation:
we already limit the power too government if something like that was to happen it would probably be the peoples fault giving more and more power to government.