Answer:
The blacksmith serves as a role model who balances his job with the role he plays with his family and community. Years after its publication, a tree mentioned in the poem was cut down and part of it was made into an armchair which was then presented to Longfellow by local schoolchildren.
Explanation:
The kings did turn against the harlot and cause her destruction.
1. Parents
2. Clams
3. Couches
4. Caves
5. Ranches
6. Armies
7. Dresses
8. Hobbies
9. Glasses
10. Arches
11. Arrows
12. Mosses
13. Props
14. Patches
15. Mints
16. Babies
17. Engines
18. Enemies
19. Supplies
20. Mistakes
Answer: Putting individuals convicted of crimes, especially violent crimes, in prison is thought to make the rest of us safer. But how much safety does all this imprisonment actually buy us? A study I recently published with colleagues shows the answer is very little, especially in the long-term.
Answer and Explanation:
In "ode to a nightingale" Keats presents the confrontation between his perception of the real and the ideal world through the song that a roxinou intones. For the speaker, the song is so poetical and full of ephemerality that it throws him into an illusion about a world as poetical and beautiful as the song and the feelings it emanates. However, with the end of the song, the speaker wakes up from this feeling of illusion and is faced with the real world that does not have the same delicacy and poetry of the ideal world. At that moment, the speaker awakens to the real nature of himself and the world and feels like dying. This confrontation between the real world and the ideal world can be seen in the lines:
<em>"Forlorn! the very word is like a bell/ To toll me back from thee to my sole self!
/ Adieu! the fancy cannot cheat so well." </em>