Well, you can analyze the poem any way you want, poetry is open to everyone's interpretation. I believe that when the poet, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, compares love to "childhood's faith," she wants to show the innocence of that love. Children have blind faith in their parents, friends, etc. and can be quite naive, the way her love is as well. However, she can also be talking about the power of her love, because a child's faith is unbreakable - it is so strong, just as much as her love. Hope this helps!
Answer: B
Explanation: It's the only one that helps justify the way that the money is still being made.
Answer:
I neither find my keys nor my bags.
Explanation:
I think this is correct answer
Answer:
A. In the end, Walton chooses to stop before his endeavor destroys him, but Frankenstein does not.
Explanation:
Walton and Frankenstein's stories are different because in the end, Walton chooses to stop before his endeavor destroys him, but Frankenstein does not.
Frankenstein according to the book was so obsessed with his work that he cared about little else and continued even when he saw the apparent dangers, but Walton stopped before his endeavor destroyed him.