Answer:
Explanation: the use of enjambment forces the reader to keep reading each subsequent line, since the meaning of one line can only be found by reading the next. By doing this multiple meaning can be expressed without confusion, and in a way which furthers the natural rhythm of the poem.
<span>The correct answer is the sea, or more precisely the ocean. It is a sea novel about a sea captain who believes that his son is being chased by a colomber, that is, a shark that wants to kill its marked enemy, and will restlesly follow it until it catches it. Something like the alligator in Peter Pan who keeps following captain Hook.</span>
Yet every one of these disasters has actually happened somewhere, and many real communities have already suffered a substantial number of them. A grim specter has crept upon us almost unnoticed, and this imagined tragedy may easily become a stark reality we all shall know.
No. I don't believe he should not of helped her. He made a moral and individual decision. Hence "and of clay we are made"
No one person is better then the next. That you are no more measured nor different in moralization than he is in height and weight. This concludes what the author refers to and his bottom line means that if we as humans are made of clay one can be shaped and molded into good and that ones past doesn't set them in stone but of clay to be reshaped recreated