This question if from the poem 'A lonely planet ponders'.
Explanation:
- It is a non-fiction poem and deals with the relationship between the rigidity of scientific principles and the unpredictability of life.
- The central idea is everything is connected and controlled by the law of nature. The planet says that it seldom sees the other planets and knows that there are many planets like him.
- 'I am unleashed but feel a pull, I am in orbit'
Gravity my greatest attraction, he never let me down'.
<span>In "The Californian's Tale," Twain implements sensory details such as hearing, sight, and sound when describing the narrator entering Henry's cabin. For example, when Twain writes, "not a sound in all those peaceful expanses of grass and woods but the drowsy hum of insects," he is using the sensory detail of hearing.</span>
I...uhm....what, are you asking?-