Answer:
Carl Sandburg's poem “Grass” is an unusual war poem in that it personifies grass. In the personification, the grass directly addresses the reader, placing the human perspective to the side. For example, Sandburg writes, “Pile the bodies high at Austerlitz and Waterloo. / Shovel them under and let me work -- / I am the grass; I cover all.” Grass, like human beings, is abundant, and from the perspective of grass, human life seems unimportant, and is therefore dismissed. This personification acts as a metaphor for how humans are treated in war.
Explanation:
I am not sure about the first question, I cannot help you with that one, sorry. :/
However, the second question I know. Ragnarok is A), an apocalyptic prophecy, a Norse prophecy stating when the end of the world will come.
Answer:
I think it's Voldemort
Explanation:
Voldemort is the villain who plays in Harry Potter. I think his backstory doesn't give him an excuse to what he became. He got orphaned at a young age like many others and allegedly couldn't love anything or anyone. But as he grew older, he became more evil and started using dark magic. His ultimate fear was death and believed in the deathly hallows. He killed lots of people without mercy, without have a second thought just to accomplish this. And he killed Harry's parents and tried to kill Harry at the age of 1 and failed. But ever since then, Harry was targeted each year at Hogwarts by him.
He uses various rhetorical means of proving his claims such as appealing to emotions. He presents the case of the King's behavior in such a way that is supposed to elicit an emotional response from the reader and motivate them to support the rebellion. Not only that but it is also masked as common sense so as to make it seem sensible.