Analysis on a song ( I did this for a history class) (you can submit the lyrics yourself) *BRAINLIEST WILL BE APPRECIATED
1)Glory- John Legend and Common
2)Glory was released in 2014 in the midst of the Black Lives Matter movement
3)This song was released as the theme song from the 2014 film “Selma”, which portrays the 1965 Selma to Montgomery marches. The movie showcased the battle of the Civil Right movement from 1965. The lyrics made reference to many important events of the Civil Right movement like Rosa Parks' resistance on the bus, the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, MLK’s work, Jim Crow laws. “One day when the glory comes” “.. Now the war isn’t over” indicating that decades after the Civil Right movement discrimination against African Americans is still alive, the work isn’t still done yet. “Saw the face of Jim Crow under a bald eagle”, interpreting that the constitution and laws of this land support the Jim Crow laws. There was also many references to the crucification of Jesus Christ which points out that religion was also a very big part of the Civil Right movement
Answer:
The fourth one
Explanation:
The others are kinda non-sensical, he wanted revenge
Answer:
Letter D is the correct answer.
Explanation:
I Will Pronounce Your Name is a poem written by Léopold Sédhar Senghor, a Senegalese poet and politician. From all the options provided, touch is the only sensory description that is not appealed to in all the poem. Smell is appealed to by mentioning cinnamon; sight is mentioned by describing the savannah, while hearing is also part of the poem when the speaker mentions a silent day.
Answer:
The metaphor in stanza 8 is "Has earned a night's repose" Because the author is comparing both the characters earnings to the *Nights repose* (without like or as, ofc because it's not a simile)
Explanation:
^^ Hope this helped :)
Alliteration is the repetition of a word of sound within the same phrase, such as "Ulalume"; Asonance is a vowel coincidence in the termination of two words, such as "it was night in the lonesome october
of my most immemorial year"; the consonance is an unmotivated use of words that are very close for each other, such as " we noted not the dim lake of Auber- (though once we had journeyed down here)"; and the poetic image describes something real through words, such as "these are days when my heart was volcanic", which explains his heart beats too strong.