Where are the options? Sorry, I think you forgot to add them
Despite its simple, almost folksy language, "Mending Wall" is a complex poem with several themes, beginning with human fellowship, which Frost first dealt with in his poem "A Tuft of Flowers" in his first collection of poems, A Boy's Will.<span> Unlike the earlier poem which explores the bond between men, "Mending Wall" deals with the distances and tensions between men.</span><span>The poem explores the contradictions in life and humanity, including the contradictions within each person, as man "makes boundaries and he breaks boundaries".</span><span> The poem also explores the role of boundaries in human society as mending the wall serves both to separate and to join the two neighbors, another contradiction</span>
Answer:
This is a primary source, namely a written one, because it derives directly from the past and its content hasn't been alternated.
Explanation:
Historians are dividing sources into primary and secondary. Primary sources are derived directly from the past, meaning that they are created at the time when some event happened. This is an example of primary source, as it is an original letter that one ruler sent to another one.
Who invented the first basketball - <span>James Naismith</span>