Answer:
Explanation:
It's the first line. All the others are of a general nature. Wise men, good men, wild men, grave men, but not in the 6th part, the address shifts to the poets father. The theme does not shift, just who the poet is addressing.
The sea represents the freedoms that Edna craves yet is denied in her current situation.
Answer: Option B
<u>Explanation:</u>
Kate Chopin’s story, ‘The role of the sea in the Awakening’ deserves a lot of appreciation because of the theme she has used in the story. The sea is a symbol of liberty, escape, and liveliness. Edna loves to spend her solitary time by sitting peacefully around the sea.
It makes her realize how small her problems are in the face of this vast universe. And this thought keeps Edna full of hopes during her hard times though the story.
I would say that the statement that the denotation of a word is more important than the connotation is false and that they are both equally important. The denotation is the literal meaning of a word such as found in the dictionary whereas the connotation involves both the negative and positive nuances of the word and the subliminal message it conveys. For example in the play Julius Cesar, one of the characters,I believe Brutus was described as having a "lean and hungry look" suggesting not just that he needed to eat and was perhaps undernourished but also suggesting that his look is rather sinister and that he may have ill intentions in mind.