The use of blank verse enjambment intensifies the contemplative ad meditative of the poem. Blank verse allows for freedom of form enhancing the tone of the poem which shifts from being hopeful to being hopeless
the use of enjambment helps hold the readers interest across line: to him in the love of nature holds communion with her visible forms she speaks a various language for her gayer hours
Answer: The main themes of the play are: fate and free will with the inevitability of oracular predictions is a theme that often occurs in Greek tragedies the conflict between the individual and the state similar to that in Sophocles’ “Antigone” and people’s willingness to ignore painful truths both Oedipus and Jocasta clutch at unlikely details in order to avoiding facing up to the inceasingly apparent truth and sight and blindness the irony that the blind seer Tiresius can actually “see” more clearly than the supposedly clear-eyed Oedipus, who is in reality blind to the truth about his origins and his inadvertent crimes.
Explanation: Hope this helps
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Answer:
25. we use scissors to cut paper
26. we write with pencils
27. we erase with and eraser
28. we write in our notebook
Answer:
Last sentence, "We must, therefore, acquiesce in the necessity, which denounces our Separation, and hold them, as we hold the rest of mankind, Enemies in War, in Peace Friends."
Explanation:
The last sentence in this excerpt from the Declaration of Independence indicates that the colonists did not wish to remain hostile toward Great Britain in the future.
It is possible that Hurston chose to tell the story within a framework to give Janie a voice in the novel. Had Hurston relied solely on a third person narrative, Janie would have had no voice. Using first person narrative in this framework proves that Janie has gained strength and independence as a result of her lifelong search for true love.