I'd say the correct answer is A, because none of the other things are mentioned in this short poem. It just speaks about a dying woman, who is likely to be Antigone.
The author of ''A mountaing calling'' suggests that John Muir valued nature. This statement can be supported because in paragraph 1 it says how John Muir never liked the word ''hike''. The author adds how in the 19th century the American society's connection to nature had grown increasingly shallow and rigid and hasty. John Muir on the other hand preferred to saunter. Sauntering meant to value what you see, and this is what John Muir spent is whole life doing: valuing and enjoying nature, instead of rushing to be the first. Another evidence that supports that John Muir valued nature when Muir was in his 30's he had stumbled upon the great California's Sierra Nevada mountains. He would scramble down steep cliff faces to get a closer look at the waterfalls and would jump and howl to show how much he loved nature (paragraph 4). Muir would also do some soulful writing about the places he visited (paragraph 5).
Answer:
I had a friend tell me that "Time flies, Make the best of it before it's gone"
Explanation:
Answer:
As a story of naturalism, Crane's characters are left to the randomness of external forces whether that is fate, nature, or a force beyond those two. In the case of “The Open Boat,” the forces operating on the character are largely ones of nature and fate. ... This is the essence of naturalism – a lack of control.
Explanation:
A suffix is a form of affix that is attached at the end of the stem form of a word. Suffixes can change the meaning of the word and usually the new word is used as an adjective or descriptive word. From the choices given, the suffix that means "bearing or producing" is letter A. -oferous.