Answer:
B.
Explanation:
Shows photographic of quantitative information and can explain multiple links of data.
Answer:
"I lived in the first century of world wars" is the opening line of "Poem" by Muriel Rukeyser (1913-1980) an American poet and political activist. Her best-known poems are about social justice, equality and feminism. Her choice of words establishes her anti-war theme and her efforts to oppose war through her poetry: "Slowly I would get to pen and paper, Make my poems for others unseen and unborn. In the day I would be reminded of those men and women, Brave, setting up signals across vast distances, Considering a nameless way of living, of almost unimagined values." She felt her poetry, which would outlive her, would be a message to those "unseen and unborn" who could work to promote peace and justice. "We would try by any means To reach the limits of ourselves, to reach beyond ourselves, To let go the means, to wake." Here Rukeyser was passing on the baton, as it were, to the generations "beyond ourselves" in the hope that they would be more purposeful peacemakers.
Answer:
And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street
Explanation:
<span>*Author:Karel Capeck
*main character(s)
-God
-the murder/kugler
-the judges
*Main Ideas
-people can only be judged by people not God --> beuase God is omicent he will also be influenced by the good things we've done; on the other hands we humans focus on the crimes we have committed: as a result we harshly punish ourselves thus making us not do the crimes again due to being discouraged in other words God would be to nice and easy since he loves us thus we do not deserve his justice
-purpose of anecdotes in kugler's life
-what is the purpose of the story ending when he summons the next criminal</span>