I don't know if there are any options, but my first guess would be - image. In his early imagist phase, Pound wanted to get rid of abstractions that were nearly the sole focus of the 19th-century romantic poetry. Instead, he aimed for pure visual images as signifiers of the world around us. He preferred simplicity as opposed to complex philosophical concepts. For example, instead of writing about nature as a source of spiritual nourishment (such as the romantic would have done), he wrote a 2-line, free-verse poem about people who are standing in the station of a metro, waiting for their train to arrive, and resembling "petals on a long, wet bough". The whole poem is an image, absolutely devoid of abstractions.
Example of actions speaking louder than words: let’s say you ask your friend not to do something and they say they won’t do it again but they continue to do it then you bring it up again and they say they won’t but continue to do it. Their actions are speaking louder than their words.
Are there any answer choices or is it an essay response type question
Answer:
- Dark spruce forest frowned on either side of the frozen water way
- vast silence reigned over the land
- But there was life abroud in the land and defiant
- it made the stout birch bark and it’s full surface rested on the snow -
Explanation:
in order top to bottom :)
<3
Answer:
(C) an ordinary yet beloved natural object
Explanation:
The poem presents Daisy with something else and is very important. Daisy is not valued, not é rara, not é incommunicado, nem é alga herdavel e que esta na familia a gerações, mas é um obnjeto muto estimmado e que tem um great valor sentimental, o que a torna importante.