Here's one that may work for you
Explanation:
Shining white foam in the blazing sun
I wondered over all day
and it came crashing by anon
until I went my way.
And it does the same when I am not around
The ocean won't stand still
The sands never could throw abound
Ocean's soft seeping shrills.
But trapped in seashells take away
the remnants of this water too
We are here to hold the sway
over what nature can do
In seashells i took home i only found
the sounds but not the soul of ocean bound.
<u>This follows the rhyme scheme of abab cdcd efef gg</u>
Answer:
D
Explanation:
Because it is a technique used by the writer to try and persuade the audience into agreeing strongly to a certain point
Hi There! :)
<span>What does the black pit represent
</span><span>a disease of lemons, characterized by dark brown, sunken spots on theskin of the fruit, caused by a bacterium, </span><span>Xanthomonas <span>syringae.</span></span>
The first use of the phrase is matter-of-fact. In the second stanza, the statement is followed by a period, which shows resignation. However, at the end of the poem, Dunbar almost shouts the phrase defiantly. The mask seems to become something he wears proudly. Through this gradual emphasis on the phrase, Dunbar could be implying that African Americans used the "mask" to hide their suffering and gain a kind of victory against society.