Answer:
C.) Along a well-traveled road
Explanation:
<em>David Swan</em> is a short story written by Nathaniel Hawthorne set along a well-traveled road. David is traveling to Boston and he stopped by the road to get rest and get some sleep. There are many travelers who noticed him sleeping by the road. Some of them was a married couple who wanted to adopt him, then there was a girl who<em> saved</em> him from a bee and admired his physical appearance, then there were two criminals who wanted to kill him, but he avoided that because he was asleep. David eventually wakes up completely unaware of people who crossed their paths with him. Hawthorne wanted to put an accent on how we have/miss numerous opportunities in life and that we should contemplate what is the right opportunity to be taken.
Answer is there 2 friends? that would be awsome Explanation:
Both poems represent the industrialized city as a highly immoral, degenerate place, a symbol of England's corruption. However, there are significant differences. Whereas Wordsworth juxtaposes the city's present state to its former glory, and does so in spiritual and abstract terms (selfishness vs. nobility of soul), Blake plunges deep into social matters - poverty-stricken members of the working class, the all-too-earthly suffering of chimney sweepers, harlots, children, disillusioned soldiers because of injustice within the harsh reality of the industrial age. Wordsworth is a proud Englishman who resents the country's present state, invoking a great poet of the past as a moral figure. Blake, on the other hand, is a socially aware citizen who depicts the bitter mundanity of small, common people.
Yes cause some of thing they said at home there think it already to said it at school