Answer:
<h2>I think its
D tell me if i am wrong ( if i am sorry...)</h2>
Explanation:
The subject of the poem is life. When you look at it in depth, its entirety is a metaphor for the passing of life. Nature's first green is gold (the birth of a child, or new life), her hardest hue to hold (innocence passes fast with life, no matter how hard we try to hold on to it). Her early leaf's a flower; but only so an hour (again with the quick passing of time for life.) The leaf subsides to leaf. So Eden sank to grief (death at the end of someone's life and the mourning that comes with it, if only a second to the hour of life), so dawn goes down to day (mourning is over, and the days continue after that someone passes and everyone has mourned). Nothing gold can stay (life is valuable, like gold, and vanishes much in the same way).
Teens are main consumers of technology
Answer:
The Grumble family found fault with everything and nothing, from the weather to the rains and the sun. And if there is nothing to grumble about, <em>"they'd growl that they'd nothing to grumble about."</em>
Explanation:
Lucy Maud Montgomery's poem "The Grumble Family" presents a neighborhood scene. In the poem, the speaker focuses on a particular family and their 'unsatisfactory' reaction to everything and how they are never contented with anything.
The Grumble family 'grumbles' about nothing and everything. Ranging from weather to complaining about nothing to grumble about, the family never seems to run out of issues to find fault with.
They grumble about <em>"the weather . . . the rain . . . the sun . . ."</em> That's not all, <em>"if everything pleased them . . . They'd growl that they'd nothing to grumble about!" </em>
This is an incomplete sentence, because it doesn't complete any meaning or make any sense.