Answer:
Borrows and Remembers
Explanation:
I think this is what you meant, to correct the words, right?
The mention of light in both of these poems show how the protagonists' feel on the object in the story leaving. They are trying to hide, to not be found. Lines 28 to 29 in w<span>here have you gone and 8 to 10 in t</span><span>he taxi </span>both show how disconnected they now feel to this other person/object.
The correct answer would be conflicts of the heart.
B.) In his poem, “The White Man's Burden,” Rudyard Kipling never actually defines the white man's burden. ... The white man's burden is to work hard to help people (“To seek another's profit,/And work another's gain) who do not want to be helped. The white man's burden, then, is the set of problems that comes with imperialism.
I believe that the best answer for this question would be B, "her own." She and Death stop at a burial ground for her, which is marked with a headstone. This entire poem is about her dealing with Death after passing away. She views the world from a distant perspective and eventually life from a distant perspective. Hope this helps.