True, robert frost did write this.
The Code of Hammurabi<span> is inscribed on this seven-foot basalt </span>stele<span>. The </span>stele<span> is now at the Louvre. The Code of </span>Hammurabi<span> refers to a set of rules or laws enacted by the Babylonian King </span>Hammurabi(reign 1792-1750 B.C.). <span>The sixth Babylonian king, </span>Hammurabi<span>, enacted the code, and partial copies exist on a 2.25 metre (7.5 ft) stone </span>stele<span> and consists of 282 laws, with scaled punishments, adjusting "an </span>eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth" <span>as graded depending on social status, of slave versus free man or woman.
hope this helped :)
alisa202</span>
During the Romantic period (roughly 1815-1910), composers used music to express themselves; orchestral music became more emotional and subjective than in previous eras. Composers were inspired by romantic love, the supernatural and even dark themes such as death. Some composers drew inspiration from the history and folk songs of their native country; others drew influences from foreign lands
I will help what do you need help with?:)
Im pretty sure it was the black intellectuals