Answer:
President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act in 1830 to relocate Native Indians to the west. In his "On Indian Removal" speech, he discusses how Indian Removal benefits both Indians and White Americans. A personal story about a young boy being relocated with his clan on the Trail of Tears is another writing about Native American removal. Though these two readings deal with the same subject, they use quite different language to express their views on Native American removal. The situation is described differently in both pieces, as is the sentence structure and tone. The language differences between Jackson's "On Indian Removal" and Rutledge's "Samuel's Memory" show how separate groups viewed and were affected by Indian removal.
I’m to the park today, and the park has swings.
Answer:
In "Sonnet 31," the speaker believes he is particularly well-qualified to
a. give the moon advice.
b. praise the moon's beauty.
c. predict the moon's future.
d. recognize the moon's problem. <-----
Since 'The Wanderer' is about a man who is alone after a war, there is no one to talk to, his who family is gone, and he has nowhere to go, the correct answer is D, 'pain of homelessness'.