Answer:
There is a problem at the lab that he works at so he has to rush there.
Is something to write I think?
It is a scholarly magazine! (or I would call them: scientific or peer-reviewed magazines). There is a number of characteristics here that are typical of a scholarly magazine:
-references to previous work (as a literature summary) and to all the work consulted
-careful review
-abstracts
The poem “<em><u>Will There Really Be a Morning</u></em> “ is written by <u>Emily Dickinson</u>. In this poem she notes the importance of a ‘morning ‘ in our lives.
Question:
What is speaker searching for in "Will There Really be a Morning"?
Answer: A Meaning of Life
Here's the criteria for Persuasive:
May make claims based on opinion. May not take opposing ideas into account.
Persuades by appealing to the audience’s emotion or by relying on the character or credentials of the writer – less on the merits of his or her reasons and evidence. Emotion-based.
I believe he's using mostly persuasive reasoning.
Here's the criteria for Argumentative reasoning:
Makes claims based on factual evidence. Makes counter-claims. The author takes opposing views into account. Neutralizes or "defeats" serious opposing ideas. Convinces audience through the merit and reasonableness of the claims and proofs offered. (I only see use of the first and last one, not 2nd or 3rd one). Here's a link for your reference. You can do a google search on persuasive vs argumentative.
Often compares texts or ideas to establish a position.
Logic based.