Answer:
COURAGOUS
Explanation:
BECAUSE NO ONE ELSE HELPS HIM FAM
<span>Locke’s notion of
tabula rasa means that every individual is born with a clean slate or that the
human brain is empty free from any information, identity or personality at
birth. A person begins to accumulate information through experience and exposure
as he or she matures. Thus, the environment and the people the infant
encounters are the sources of his or her identity and they are the ones that
influence his or her personality. In short, when a child is born in an
environment of peace and order to parents who shower him or her with love and
care, he or she would grow up to be an ideal person. On the other hand, if he
or she is exposed to chaos and abuse, he or she would end up being a violent
and problematic person.</span>
Answer:
<em>From the Dark Tower</em> - paradox of social injustice, uses set meter and rhyme scheme, symbol of wasted efforts
<em>I, Too</em> - references a Walt Whitman work, uses free verse
Explanation:
Langston Hughes and Countee Cullen were very significant poets who belonged to the Harlem Renaissance movement.
Cullen's poem <em>From the Dark Tower</em> tells about the paradox of social injustice. White people have always oppressed African Americans, and this is present in the given poem as well. African Americans are the ones doing the work, and white people don't allow them to be rewarded for their effort. This is why their efforts are wasted.
It's written in a set meter called iambic pentameter. The rhyme scheme is <em>abab.</em>
<em>I, Too</em> references Whitman's poem called<em> I Hear America Singing</em>. It's written using free verse. This is why it doesn't have a set meter or rhyme, unlike <em>From the Dark Tower.</em>