Answer:
Option A
Explanation:
An individual hiking through a forest is abruptly confronted with a fork in the path with two paths wanting to be chose. This individual pauses,hands in pockets, and looks back and forth between the options. This is a reflection on the difficulty of making the choice and the consequences of this decision will made all the difference in this individual life.
The last stanza signify choices in life, whether to go alone or follow the other path traveled more often, which signify the possible choices people can make in life, and the impact that these have in determining their future.The last stanza in this poem highlights those times in life when a decision has to be made because life is a journey.
The correct answer to the last stanza of Robert Frost’s poem “The Road Not Taken poem is option A.
The speaker is recalling, "with a sigh," how difficult it had been for him to choose the more traveled or the less traveled of the two roads. The forked road is a metaphor for the inherent duality in the natural world.
It means that someone is examining and explaining things that are the same and the things that are different between two similar things. It would be like taking two different kinds of flowers and noticing the differences in things like color, shape, etc, and also the similarities such as petals, stems, etc.
I hope this helps! :)
Answer:
The words themselves do not stress a particular mood, but the passage as a whole gives off a mood of potential change and worry. There is only one word in particular that creates mood, which is 'concerned'. However, each individual word in the passage does not create mood so technically it does not create mood.
Answer:
The mastermind that worked with Freud was Albert Einstein, a German-born theoretical physicist that in 1931, the Institute for Intellectual Cooperation invited to a cross-disciplinary exchange of ideas about politics and peace with a thinker of his choosing. Einstein choose Sigmund Freud despite of being skeptical of psychoanalysis he came to admire Freud's work and working with him.
The realization of the book was mainly based on a series of letters were they discussed the abstract generalities of human nature and the potential concrete steps for reducing violence in the world. This entire work was published in 1933. Only 2,000 copies of the English translation were printed, most of which were lost during the World War II. But some of the correspondence are part of the 1960 volume Einstein on Peace.