After analyzing the speaker in the passage from "Mending Wall," we can say the following about what is revealed:
D. He isn't taking the task seriously.
<h3>The speaker in "Mending Wall"</h3>
"Mending Wall" is a poem by Robert Frost in which the speaker and his neighbor fix a stone wall that separates their properties. The neighbor thinks the wall is important, but the speaker thinks it is utterly unnecessary.
The speaker is clearly not taking the task seriously. He describes the repair of the wall as an "outdoor game," as if he and the neighbor were just children having fun. He even goes as far as talking of using "a spell to make [the stones] balance."
Taking the information above into consideration, we can select letter D as the correct option.
Learn more about "Mending Wall" here:
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Answer:
"The Gettysburg Address" is a speech given by Abraham Lincoln in 1863. which some consider to be the greatest speech ever given by any US President.
Although the largest portion of this short speech is about honoring and remembering soldiers who gave their life on the battlefield, it is important to focus on the first few sentences of the speech.
Lincoln starts by reminding everyone on the Declaration of Independence 87 years ago (four score and seven years ago). That was the document that created and shaped American nation. The most prominent pillar on which the document resides is that "all men are created equal".
Now, Lincoln argues that that belief is put to a test. And that test is Civil War. It is a test that needs to show whether a country so dedicated to freedom and equality can endure and persist.
Basically, he poses a question "How long will a country that rests on the principles of freedom and equality regard slavery as normal thing?". According to him, the answer lies in the outcome of the war.
A higher of 1 and an even number I would think there's only 1 way but what do I know
No it is not a personification. A personification is when you give human attributes to an object. For example, “The trees see everything.” The trees do not have eyes so they cannot really see but they are always there and always watching.