It might be said that the first lesson of the poem is to float on one´s back (option A) It seems that a father is teaching his daughter to swim on her back. This can be inferred by the use of certain words such as "Lie back daughter" "spread your arms wide". It also might be understood that the lesson is deep that that, It might suggest a father letting her daughter go, letting her be because she is going to be safe.
Answer:
Riding a bicycle and playing piano.
Explanation: she began riding a bicycle and playing piano
Percy Shelley's poem "Mutability" explores the <u>constant change</u> that humans face throughout their lifetimes. He demonstrates that, in contrast to change, <u>human existence</u> is unimportant and easily forgotten.
Option B is the correct answer. That is the last stanza describes that "Life is fleeting and always changing" according to the context of Mutability.
<h3><u /></h3><h3><u>The reasons for the description of life as per the poem:</u></h3>
- Its path of departure is still open: (it shows how life is fleeting)
- Man's yesterday may never be the same as his tomorrow; (life is full of change.)`
- Mutability is the only thing that can stand the<u> test of time</u>. (It may appear paradoxical, but only one thing will remain constant: change.)
Therefore, according to the poem life is always changing and fleeting.
Learn more about the last stanza, refer to the link below:
brainly.com/question/3873478
Some movies I've seen that are set in Italy show a family outside all seated around a very large table. The joyous noise is overwhelming and the food is never ending.
People come out in spring and summer because there is a specialness in the air that's as aromatic as the food on the table. Celebrating each meal as though it was a feast (which it is in the hands of people like that), brings a rightness to everyone at the table, each as welcome as anyone else or they wouldn't be there.
So the reds or whites of the sauces, or the greens of the salads or the yellows of the cheeses, or the sparkling glasses holding the purest wine that can be afforded all blend in a dazzling mixture of blinding color the way an artist would put his colors onto his canvas.