I am not sure which poem you are referring to here, but one poetical technique is called enjambment. This occurs when a line continues to the next line without a pause. Even if there is a stanza break in between, the lines are meant to be read continuously. For example, consider these lines from a poem by William Wordsworth called Beauteous Evening:
"The holy time is quiet as a Nun
Breathless with adoration; the broad sun
Is sinking down in its tranquility"
Here, Wordsworth is not intending that you pause after you read "Nun" or "sun." He wants you to read these lines as a continuous sentence or thought. Hope this helps.
The first president of the United States
Home improvement project by (name)
The project took two days to complete. We Put new backsplash in our home. We first went to home depot to buy the backsplash. After that we measured all the sides of where the backsplash needs to go. Then we cut the tiles to size and started prepping glue for the wall. Once that was all done we added the backsplash and sealed it off. During this whole process we used safety glasses safety gloves and breathing masks when cutting the tile.
I got you fam ;)
Answer:
maybe d? im sorry if im wrong
Explanation:
Answer:
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Explanation:
This excerpt comes from the book "The Philosophy of History" by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel.
Hegel was a German philosopher and one of the most influential philosophers in history. He was important in the development of many recent ideologies and philosophies, such as the philosophies of Marx and Nietzsche, phenomenology, German existentialism, and psychoanalysis.