Still wouldst thou sing and i have ears in vain
to thy high requiem become a sod
The speaker is expressing his feelings of sadness with some touch of regret because the other person will continue to sing but he could no longer hear it. The song will become a requiem or songs of prayer for the dead and will become a sod or the crust of the ground. In other words, the speaker will be dead or is dying and he feels that the other person's singing will only serve as covering to his corpse that will have been buried under the ground.
Answer:
He was shocked when she kissed him, because she was white. This shows that interracial relationships or any sort of intimacy was unusual for people in Maycomb. He was also scared because he knew that it wasn't normal for that to happen and worried about what would happen and or what people would say because she was a white woman, and no one was going to believe that he didn't kiss her back.
Hope this helps!
Answer:
The answer is A hope I helped please mark brainliest :)
Explanation:
Answer: dude you could just research it but oh well, the novel explores the relationship between the deressive caldwell and his anxious on. George has largely given up on life; what glory he knew, as a football player and solider in WW1, has passed.