Answer:
Darry is hard on him but only because he wants the best from ponyboy and more. Sometimes he doesn't mean to do it intentionally and yells at him. That would really show why they don't get along.
Hope it helps and have a great day! =D
~sunshine~
Because for christmas he bought her combs and now she cant use them until it grows back
Each stanza develops the speaker's thoughts on death and beauty, moving from an acknowledgment that life is temporary to her plea that beauty save the moment by wounding her.
- Sara Teasdale's "Blue Squills" begins conventionally enough. The speaker describes the white flowers that cover the cherry tree in the first two stanzas and refers to blue squills, which are also flowers, in the third.
- She claims that there were millions of Aprils before she was born and had the opportunity to appreciate their beauty, and that there will be many more after she is gone.
- This was a sentiment that had been expressed many times before and would be expressed many times after her death.
Thus the correct answer is Option B.
To learn more about Sara Teasdale, refer: brainly.com/question/28035688
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The complete question is mentioned below:
Which answer BEST describes the way the stanza structure of "Blue Squills" reflects and reinforces its meaning?
a. Each stanza describes a different aspect of April, moving from the whiteness of the cherry bough and the blue of the flower (stanza 1) to their flames (stanza 2) to the pain that Spring causes her (stanzas 3 and
b. Each stanza develops the speaker's thoughts on death and beauty, moving from an acknowledgment that life is temporary (stanzas 1 and 2) to her plea that beauty save the moment by wounding her (stanzas 3 and 4).
c. Each stanza develops the speaker's thoughts on death and beauty, moving from her thoughts about the past (stanza 1) to her thoughts about the future (stanza 2) to her preoccupations in the present (stanzas 3 and 4).
d. Each stanza describes a different aspect of the tree and the flower, moving from the whiteness of the cherry bough (stanza 1) to the blue flame of the flower (stanza 2) to the shaking and shimmering of both (stanzas 3 and 4).
A Broken Dream Deep inside the heart of every human being lives a dream so all consuming that the person would go to almost any length to achieve it. In the novel The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Jay Gatsby has an ambition that completely consumes every inch of his being. It drives him to such extremes that he becomes a slave to his lust for success. The story begins with Nick Carraway, a Midwesterner now living on Long Island, who finds himself fascinated by the mysterious and extravagent lifestyle of his neighbor, Jay Gatsby. As the story unfolds Nick must watch as Gatsby gives up his identity to see that his lifelong dream of success is fulfilled. The key to Gatsby’s success lies buried in the heart of the woman that he loves and absolutely obsesses over, Mrs. Daisy Buchanan. Daisy is a married woman and mother who is extremely shallow and materialistic. Yet, somehow she has managed to capture Gatsby’s devotion. Fitzgerald uses many symbols to show the evolution and weight of Gatsby’s dream, however, the most prominent is a green light stationed on the end of Daisy’s dock that lies directly across a bay from Gatsby’s mansion. This light started as a dream and ended in a failure to let go of the past. Fitzgerald uses the green light to portray the evolution of the hopes and dreams of Jay Gatsby as he trys to do the impossible, relive the past. Jay Gatsby was a man with a lot of things, however, the one thing he didn’t have was the thing he desired most. The heart of Daisy Buchanan, his ex lover. Gatsby was not wealthy enough to marry Daisy when they first met He got into bootlegging to make a quick buck but wasn't fast enough. Daisyhad married another man while he made his millions. So, Gatsby’s unrequited love landed him in West Egg New York, across the bay from the object of his obsession’s beautiful mansion.
HI, hope this helps!