<span>I think he was saying "Shakespeare" cause it was reminiscent to him of better times, certainly 'cultural' better times, Winston in essence was really a man who tried to escape the banalities of his life, which the party so much was oppressing towards its people, the party really did its best to extinct every kind of 'culture' out of the people's mind, Winston here really showed that he had a great power of Will, he wasn't and wouldn't never give away his culture, he also to my opinion was an optimistic mind, the fact that he woke up with the word "Shakespeare" must have gone together with a(n very) optimistic smile, I think, and still phantazise about that!</span>
Answer:
OVERVIEW
During the Civil War, thousands of poems about the conflict were written by everyday citizens. These poems appeared in a variety of print formats, including newspapers, periodicals, broadsheets, and song sheets. Drawing upon the Library of Congress' online collections, this page offers a selection of poetry written by soldiers and citizens from the North and the South. These poems enable us to better understand the role of poetry during the war years and how poetry helped unify citizens, inspire troops, memorialize the dead, and bind the nation's wounds in the aftermath of the war.
<span>Noun. This part of a speech refers to words that are used to name persons, things, animals, places, ideas, or events. ...Pronoun. A pronoun is a part of a speech which functions as a replacement for a noun. ...Adjective. ...Verb. ...Adverb. ...Preposition. ...Conjunction. ...<span>Interjection.
there are all of them
hope this helps and please make this the braily-est answer</span></span>
A. the raven reminds the speaker of his loneliness