<em>A claim that is able to support this evidence may be;</em>
C. In “The Road Not Taken,” Robert Frost addresses the theme that an insignificant choice can have a significant effect.
<u>The speaker says in the poem that the roads were basically the same. There is no questioning that the speaker did or did not take the road that was less traveled, because he did not. He believed they were the same. </u>
<u>As for the sigh, it can be interpreted in different ways, except, the sigh and the last stanza cannot be interpreted as if the speaker is happy because he took the unpopular and less traveled path. That idea is not presented at all in the poem. </u>
Option B caught my attention and led me to believe it may or not be the correct answer as well.
<u>Nevertheless, the speaker states that he shall be telling this with a sigh because there is a certain amount of regret. </u>
<u>The speaker is telling this with a sigh because he could not take both roads.</u>
You can also ask yourself, <em>"Why is it called The Road Not Taken" and not "The Road Taken"</em> ?
The sigh seems to be a sigh of regret.
Your question: what are darry's thoughts about his inner self?
Could you provide an image of the text which this question pertains to?
They are ordinary working-class people who blame society for their sufferings.
I would say the answer is because they sometimes fell bad about something and they don't know how to work it out, I am sorry but I don't know much about boxers... ^^
I can help with English since I am in an AP English class and a peer tutor in English but anyways if you can elaborate on this that would be wonderful..
It is false to claim that a Christian and a pantheist have identical views of God and his relationship with nature.
<h3 /><h3>What is pantheism?</h3>
It corresponds to a philosophical doctrine that believes in God in a comprehensive way, that is, the belief portrays God, nature and the universe as identical.
Therefore, unlike Christianity, pantheism does not believe that God is a creative and anthropomorphic being.
Find out more about Christianity here:
brainly.com/question/855630