What literary devices are present in the poem "Love Comes Quietly" by Robert Creeley? Give at least two examples.
Lo que siente el autor en su breve poema <u>""Love Comes Quietly"</u> es sorprendente.
No parece que se acerque al <u>autodesprecio o al pánico,</u> ni a la ira hacia uno mismo o hacia los demás.
#HopeThisHepls
<span>#1) In act 1, scene1, how does the cobbler`s opinion of Caesar differ from Flavius and Murellus` opinion?
Answer: The cobbler's opinion of Caesar differ from Flavius and Marullus' opinion in that the cobblers feel great respect and admiration towars Caesar's feat while on the other hand we have Marullus worried or even alarmed at Caesar’s return after he defeated his rival and also former co-ruler Pompey. Marullus knew that this victory would mean that Caesar will be the most powerful man in Rome. For this same reason he felt in a very dangerous position. He assumed that Caesar would soon impose one-man rule. Marullus joins Flavius who feels the same way to try and put a stop to Caesar.
I hope it helps, Regards.</span>
Answer:
d. All of the above.
Explanation:
In his "The Cruise of the Snark", Jack London writes about his own personal adventures sailing. This memoir is a non-fictional account of the author and his wife while traveling across the South Pacific in 1907.
The given passage/excerpt is taken from <em>Chapter 6: A Royal Sport</em> of the book. Here, London describes the sight he saw, that of a man surfing with poise and great expertise. He describes the man as <em>"erect, full-statured, not struggling frantically in that wild movement, not buried and crushed and buffeted by those mighty monsters . . . flying through the air, flying forward, flying fast..."</em>
Through this description of the surfer, we can know that London had expected the man to be crushed by the waves but at the same time, was amazed and respect the man and his abilities to surf that way.
Thus, the correct answer is option d.