Well, there are some simple but very deep lines written by Hughes which pose as an allusion to the Whitman's poem, and the way readers can recognize it during acquaintance with these authors is being hidden inthe very first<span> line of the poem (“I, too, sing America”) which is commonly known as a direct response to Whitman’s “I Hear America Singing.”
</span>I am pretty sure it will help you!
The direct object in the sentence is passengers.
Direct Object follows a transitive verb and answers to the question who or what. It can be a noun, pronoun, phrases, or clauses.
Subject = sailors
Transitive verb = rescued
sailors rescued who? - passengers - direct object.
It's a book describing life in the woods.
The answer which is not a detail Carson used to describe the pool in the cave at low tide is B. Hundreds of periwinkles browse the branches and roots of the trees.