Answer:
The speaker seeks the moments of happiness in the poem From Blossoms.
Explanation:
From Blossoms is a poem written by Li-Young Lee. The poem talks about finding happiness in small moments and capturing them in your memory. He shares his experience of eating peaches in the poem.
After reading the poem, I opine that the speaker is seeking moments of happiness. By saying <em>"There are days we live/ as if death were nowhere",</em> the speaker is asserting that he choose to live in happiness as if death is nowhere. This means that the speaker is not thinking much about the future but living the present moments of happiness and capturing them in his memories.
Answer:
The dog was a bolt of lighting.
Explanation:
Or this:
He could lift a building with that strength!
They are* instead of they is. And also blue* instead of blew.
Answer:
Tybalt
Explanation:
Tybalt sends a letter to Romeo's house to challenge him to a duel because he is mad that Romeo crashed the party.
Answer:
D. "The hallway smelt of boiled cabbage and old
rag mats."
Explanation:
Dystopian means a bad future. It is like the Hunger Games or Terminator, where the world has gone a dark path. Bad things are happening in the future that are much worse than they are now. Let's go over the answers.
A. This is totally an example of a dystopian future. You can never turn of the tv completely. It's always on, always there.
B. This is absolutely an example of a dystopian future. This thing, Big Brother, is watching you. If you are always being watched, that is a terrible future. No control, no freedom.
C. This answer goes hand in hand with A. The TV never shuts off, and there is something suspicious about it. This character, Winston, doesn't even feel safe with his back to the TV. The word "revealing" suggests that someone or something could see him through the TV, as if he were revealed and being watched. This is a dystopia.
D. Now, this answer isn't really a dystopia. A bad smell isn't necessarily a future that went down a dark path. The hallway just smells bad. This doesn't match up to A: the TV is always on, B: you are always being watched, and C: the TV is always watching you. The answer is D.