When it comes to poetry, I have found that the reading approach can really help you understand complicated phrases or metaphors. When listening to a poem, the narrator can help paint the picture the author was originally trying to create. However, when you can feel the paper, follow the words, use your own voice to profess each line- you can understand the subliminal meaning in many ways rather than one. One way is never the only way, otherwise, poetry wouldn't exist. Poetry isn't always understood, which is why it can mean many different things to many different people. 
        
             
        
        
        
A) It presents the main idea of the entire composition
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
This probably didn't help you  sorry I'm a idiot.  
Explanation:
Liberty as a social value or social idea is a relatively recent phenomenon. It truly is. Sure, we’ve all heard about the ancient Greeks’ idea of ‘freedom’ and ‘democracy’ but these words ring hollow if you factor in the reality of Athens in ancient times. Athenian society features a small group of truly free people and lots of slaves who fueled the economy. Of course, women couldn’t vote and were relatively voiceless. Hardly the model of freedom and democracy, right? Moreover, as our collective political philosophy matured in the centuries after the Greeks, we have come to realize that there is actually a conflict between individual liberty and democracy. You have to remember that democracy simply means majority rule. This is a problem for the individual minority. This is a problem for unpopular subgroups in a larger population. This is a problem for people who live among a large number of people who expect their societies to be homogenous. Why? Let’s put it this way, if you are one of a handful of sheep among an army of wolves, you can bet who will be served up for lunch whenever a vote is called.
 
        
             
        
        
        
That I believe would be the answer, but is this multiple choice?