so I just woke up so it might not be the best but here ya go buddy ol pal
"Wait, where did you get that?" Mary had apparently been standing there for a while. Only when she asked me that was when I knew the secret was out. "This? Oh, no where I guess." I answered. I didn't need to give her an explanation for why I was here in this very situation. All that mattered was that I was finally here. And I wasn't about to let her ruin my progress that I worked so hard for. "Stop messing with me! Is that...is that...mom?" she said with a pale face. I threw her a quick look and continued going through the once locked chest that had been in our attic for some time now. "So this is what Dad was hiding huh?" I said, about to turn to face her when the very thing I had tried to avoid had finally happened. "MARY NO-"
the end bahahahahahaha
It refers to both the speaker’s inability to help and the drowning man’s position in the water. Thus, option "D" is correct.
<h3>What is the theme of poem?</h3>
The mother of the dead man is not a participant in the poem. She is not mentioned explicitly in any of the verses, and there is no evidence to prove she has an impact on the dead man's current situation.
It could be argued the mother plays a role in the line "'It must have been too cold for him his heart gave way'... They said", but this phrase is rather attributed to the dead man's friends, as the speaker of the phrase is referred as "They".
Thus, option "D" is correct.
To learn more about "Not Waving but Drowning” click here:
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Ozymandias statue found in mud. ... Percy Bysshe Shelley's 1818 sonnet Ozymandias – which contained the line “Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!” – was written soon after the British Museum acquired a large fragment of a statue of Ramses II from the 13th century BC.