Answer:
2. It seems that this poem is talking about a breakthrough in finding who you are. Relaxing and having time to yourself to really learn who you are and who you want to be. “In Maine I've learned to absorb what I see, and how to relax and just be me”
3.
It does not say that Maine was boring. There was action in every stanza “how to steer a canoe...” “how to catch a turtle with my bare hands”
4. It says it by repeating all the fun things she has done while there and how she started relaxing and being herself “now to walk through a swamp and burn off a leech” “how to dive through water or flip from the float”
You’re gonna do the first one sweetie cause I’m not. That’s what happens when you don’t feel like doing your own homework ✨. Plus I’d need to be there in person. Wish you luck tho
Explanation:
Answer:
tord is red tom is blue edd is green and matt sucks
Explanation:
This issue is complexed, but for an international scale- the way you can uphold children's rights is to create fundraisers for UNICEF. This is a UN sponsored NGO dedicated to saving children all over our planet.
On a personal level, you can uphold children's rights by creating youth groups, that volunteer in your community and show youth leadership. It is through these initiatives where you help the less-fortunate, or show adults the amount of work we can achieve as 'children'.
Answer and Explanation:
In the short story "Marigolds", by Eugenia Collier, the narrator lives in a poor black community. The story takes place during the Great Depression that devastated the United States in the 1930's. <u>Even though there were people who said "prosperity... was 'just around the corner,'" the narrator and her community knew better than to believe those words. They had always been poor. Their hard work never paid off. Those words, according to the narrator, "were white folks’ words." Maybe prosperity would return to white people soon, but the narrator's community had never seen or had it; the American Dream never came true for them. How can they believe those words if the people who say such words are the ones who exploit their work?</u>