Because, I think the work it's so tireds!
Mine was actually really interesting mine is rock climbing without the belt attached to your back the first time I tried I didn’t fall, the weird thing is my hands became bigger and bigger once I started now my arms are really skinny but I have big hands. Rock climbing is still my hobby.
Answer:
She wanted to know how to deal with her problems.
Explanation:
In paragraph five, Rachel would have had the wisdom
to handle the situation with Mrs. Price. She says “if I
was one hundred and two I’d have known what to say
when Mrs. Price put the red sweater on my desk”.
In the last paragraph, Rachel wants the red sweater
incident to be far in the past, “far away like a runaway
balloon, like a tiny o in the sky, so tiny-tiny you have to
close your eyes to see it”
Answer:
xnskwkdnzn
Explanation:
1. the boy walked into his large house.
2. the wolf ran into the dark forest.
3. the clever magician fooled the confused people.
4. the hungry man begged for hot food.
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".