I think the correct answer from the choices listed above is the third option. It would to discuss a time when you met your childhood hero the <span>prompt that would require you to write a reflective essay. This requires you to reflect on your past especially on your childhood experiences. Hope this answers the question.</span>
Answer: ROW AFTER ROW WITH STRICT IMPUNITY
THE HEADSTONES YIELD THEIR NAMES TO THE ELEEMNT
THE WIND WHIRRS WITHOUT RECOLLECTION
IN THE RIVEN TROUGHS THE SPLAYED LEAVES
PILE UP OF NATURE THE CASUAL SCARAMENT
TO THE SEAONAL ETERNITY OF DEATH
THEN DRIVEN BY THE FIERCE SCRUTINY
OF HEAVEN TO THEIR ELECTION IN THE VAST BREATH
THEY SOUGH THE RUMOUR OF MORTALITY
Explanation:
WITH AN ODE THE POEM DOES NOT HAVE TO RHYME
HOPE THIS HELPS.
Oh,* do please come with me
To the land of make believe
Across the roaring rivers
Through the whispering winds
and past* the ferocious beasts
Dream it and you will see it
Want it and in your hand it appears
For the land of make believe
has all you could ever dream of
Boom, Bang, and Bash!
The sound of the cannons fire
Flutter, Flish, and Flash,
The sound of the fairy's wings surround you
The magic door appears
Find your key!
Though as most things do
There is a lock
For to get through the magic door
A child like imagination is required
Deep down inside find yours,
and the key will be forever be in your hands!
Edits have been made! It's perfect! Hope this helps!! :)
Answer:One summer we found
a dead baby shark
washed up on the beach,
cut it open with a dinner knife
from the house,
and performed an
outdoor autopsy.1
As we marveled
at its
miniature anatomy,
reveled
in the smallness
of each little organ,
seagulls circled overhead.
The ocean was quiet,
barely making waves.
It kept vigil
for its tiny causality.
The spring prior,
an alligator wandered
onto the beach during my
uncle’s second wedding.
It was far enough away
to merit an absence of fear, but
nobody took photos or said
a word— we just stared
as it settled itself in the surf,
hoping to be cleansed.
Answer:
he was a British army officer and a business man known for raising money for charity