The correct answer is sighing from desire.
Indeed, the lexical field is populated with words that express tenderness, beauty and purity. However, there is a symbolic, underlying carnal desire in the poem. The sibilance is very ambiguous, just as the meaning of the words used to convey it (shade, less, grace, waves, tress). The word “waves” is especially evocative, as it expresses the waves of desire of the narrator for the beautiful woman.
Can help the author tell the story
Two unexpected details of Mann's description are that the peoples of pre-Columbian America were extremely numerous and socially evolved.
<h3>How did Mann make these discoveries?</h3>
- He began studying throughout the American continent.
- He analyzed artifacts, documents, and evidence about native peoples.
Mann discovered that the peoples of pre-Columbian America were very different from what Europeans advertised. These peoples were very numerous and formed very large ethnic groups that were larger than the population of Paris and London combined.
In addition, people were not uncivilized, but socially and scientifically evolved, as they had a well-organized society with norms and knew how to manipulate the environment technologically.
Learn more about pre-Columbian America:
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