The narrator mentioned feather to IMPLY THAT THE CAMPER IS ENGAGED IN TRIVIAL ACTIVITY. Feather represent an inconsequential thing, that is not worth of one's consideration. So, in the passage given above, when the speaker said 'You make things more like feather to regulate your going and coming? He is actually saying that, why do you spend your time on things that are trivial, things that are not worthy of one's time and energy.
Hi! I would say that the speaker in this poem called <em>A Servant to Servants</em>, by Robert Frost, mentions feathers <em>to show her knowledge of how ferns resemble feathers</em>. <u>The correct option is the first one.</u>
Explanation:
I chose the first choice because I don't perceive admiration in the speaker's voice, neither I perceive a judgment about his activity being trivial, as it says in the last option. I don't think that is the second option either because she doesn't say anything about the camper's free life, <em>she just mentions and compares ferns with feathers, casually, she slips that comment that makes the receptor of the comment know that she knows about the similarity between both.</em>
Yes I would've, Harriet Tubman risked being caught by slave hunters each time she went to the south, which was 19 times. She ended up helping about 300 slaves make it to the north so they could be free.