This poem was written by William Carlos William.<span>freely written. </span><span>It followed no pattern but continuously written. </span><span> It has a sort of rhythm making it fond to hear. It was an ordinary poem of food. It only tells an appreciation of reserved food for breakfast which the author ate one day.</span>
Answer: C. "Leave my loneliness unbroken! quit the bust above my door! Take thy beak from out my heart, and take thy form from off my door!"
Explanation:
In <em>The Raven</em>, the speaker is dealing with a recent death of Lenore, a woman he loved. One night, he is visited by an unusual guest, the raven that can speak. The raven, however, only utters one word - <em>"Nevemore".</em>
In this excerpt, the speaker is deeply distraught and orders the raven to leave. He wants the bird to return to the storm and leave its perch on the bust of Pallas above his door. The speaker, moreover, wants to be alone and to deal with his loss all by himself. He does not need companion at this point, especially not this supernatural creature that responds to every question with the same, not so promising word.
C and B. A past tense refers to the past. Crawls is currently doing, was crawling could be either present or past, so if you have a multiple choice that would be one of them. C is crawled, meaning he was. And D is will crawl, meaning the future.
Well if its a "real word" may depend on dialect, or where your from specifically. There are many words in Texas not really recognized as "real words" like "y'all" or many things like that. Perhaps it is a word somewhere. But I have never heard it. Remember, language is like a liquid, always shifting, and changing.