"<span>D. The love of his beloved is more valuable than wealth or power" is the best option from the list since this piece is essentially about appreciating the important things in life that are not of the "material" world. </span>
Personification is giving human characteristics to a nonhuman object. #3 seems like the best choice. Saying sleep did not visit Rainsford is giving sleep the human characteristic of visiting. (Like people do)
Hope that makes sense.
Answer:
skin
Explanation:
Further, the narrator tells the readers, “All depends, all depends on the skin,/all depends on the skin you're living in”(45-46), repeatedly throughout the poem to emphasize the irony that one's skin color can dictate the way they are able to live, and the way other's force them to live.
Answer:
My dad is like the village blacksmith.
The first and second verse of the poem, the writer describes the physical attributes of the blacksmith.
Then in verse 3, the blacksmith's innate qualities of consistency, and hard work are unravelled.
This is very typical of my dad who though is a farmer never slips up on his work and always keeps his promise.
Another quality of the blacksmith that I see in my dad is found in verse 5. It reads that the blacksmith sits amongst the boys on Sunday, connoting that he is a Christian.
My dad, same as the blacksmith not only goes to church on Sunday. He prays and teaches us to do the same.
He is quite inclined towards God. I guess it's because much like the blacksmith who from steel forges various kinds of tools and shapes objects, He recognises that many of the things around us too were "forged" by a Superior Blacksmith.
Cheers!
I don't understand question.
Explanation:
actually I don't understand question