The answer is D
Explanation: In the second half of the passage it states that he haid sent them a "token of his very great affection". This of course means that the answer has to be D: the children’s host in Chesham still cared about them after they left.
In this poem<span>, </span>Whitman questions his own existence and the futility of life<span>. He ponders the "endless trains of the faithless," or the many people who, throughout his </span>life<span>, betray his expectations. He describes cities full of foolish people and reproaches himself for being no better than these faithless masses.</span>
Answer:
The way that William Butler Yeat's poem "From the Antigone" is parallel to Sophocle's Antigone is the speaker in the poem, as well as the chorus in the play, lament noble Antigon'e terrible fate. The poem only speaks about a woman who is dying. This woman is most likely Antigone.
Explanation:
Answer: There is no set metrical rhyme or patterns of meter and rhythm. Unlike traditional verse, free form is not constrained by the rules regulating syllables in stanzas. There is often confusion as to what is meant by visual poetry.
Based on the excerpt given above, it can be inferred that:
She cares deeply for Jim, she is used to feeling short on money and she is happy in her relationship with Jim. That she care for Jim is made obvious by the way she save toward buying a gift for him and the way she talks about him. The part of the passage which reads, 'expenses has been greater than..........., shows that she is used to feeling short on money.