<h2>Hello the answer to this question is:</h2><h2>Junior states that while his grandmother has many great qualities, her tolerance is the one that means the most to him. Junior explains that his grandmother holds firmly to the old Indian principles that existed before the Christians came along and instilled fear into Indians.</h2><h2>Sorry, if this is too much... I just wanted to make sure that if you had to state your answer you could have some textual evidence. </h2><h2>Make sure that you re-read so while your saying it, it flows casually.</h2><h2>Good Luck to you!!</h2>
False. It has two syllables. A stressed one followed by an unstressed syllable.
<u>Answer:</u>
There is one secret and there is also the development of fear that the shock which her brother will get might kill her. At the same time, she still have hope that she might get her brother back and believes that her brother is alive out. She further believes that her brother has not left her. She also makes preparations believing that her brother will come back for her. This is the reason why she includes the reasons of the Seminoles history and their situation today.
Poe is a very complex writer who loves to experiment and the poem "The Raven" is a valid proof of Poe's understanding of symbols in universal literature and his wish to explore and have control upon words and rhythm. The repetition of the word 'nevermore' comes to amplify the elegy that mourns the loss of the beloved Lenore. The effects the long vowels produce are shivering the readers' heart. Lord Byron himself experimented the play upon sounds in his poems before. Raven is the metamorphosis of a tragic love, a favourite symbol of death in many pieces of literature from ancient times. The visual contrast of a white bust like a ghost to the dark black raven in a "bleak" December, like in Dickens's "Bleak House", reinforce the tone of mourning a dear person.
In point of rhyme composition, the poem is fully based on Elisabeth Barretts' sophisticated rhythm and rhyme of "Lady's Geraldine Courtship" poem. The rhyme scheme is ABCBBB. The heavy use of alliteration, "doubting dreamy dreams..." plays huge role in the musicality of this beautiful narrative poem of 18 stanzas in which every B line rhymes with the obsessive "nevermore".