The correct answer is C. <span>The speaker in In Memoriam, A. H. H. is the poet, but the speaker in “The Lady of Shalott” lacks a specific identity.
"In Memoriam, A. H. H." is a very personal poem about the loss of Tennyson's dear friend. The speaker talks in the 1st person, thus providing the poem with a tone of deep, personal grief over the friend's premature death. The poem is rich with drama, as the speaker questions God's existence, Christian ethics, wonders and enigmas of nature...
On the other hand, the speaker in "The Lady of Shalott" is anonymous but, in a way, omniscient - as if he knows everything, all the secrets, intimate feelings of the mysterious Lady, magical spells that bind her.</span>
The traditional order of the sentence is inverted, or reversed.
Answer:B
I think this is the answer.
Answer:
The passage is written in first person and it talks about a personal experience.
Explanation:
the excerpt uses words like I and my, which you use to refer to yourself. For example, "I wouldn't be thirteen until August."
Answer:
Explanation:
yeah sure ill give it a shot
Answer:
The crowd will turn against Steve, believing he is an alien in disguise.
Explanation:
<em>The Monsters are Due on Maple Street</em> by Rod Sterling tells the fictional story of how a community began to suspect their neighbors of being aliens who came to spy on humans. Aided by Tommy's story of how an alien group resided as a family to spy over mankind, the people began to check out the suspicious people they believe could be an alien.
From the given conversation between Don and Steve, we can infer that the people had begun to be suspicious of his lifestyle. Added to that, his own wife had also admitted that he'd <em>"spend hours down in your basement workin' on some kind of radio or something"</em> which none had seen.
The given excerpt shows that the people will suspect Steve of being an alien in disguise and turn against him.