Answer:
Meteors!
Meteors burn up in the atmosphere, like a ball of fire, before they get to the ground.
Sometimes it can also be called a meteorite.
<em>*eliza*</em>
Answer:
a night in early November
Explanation:
In a small village, there was a poor family in the corner of the block, once they moved in they never came out until nighttime November-
when it was nighttime they would be playing outside their front yard with no lights and their parents cooking a barbeque with no fire. One time, a foolish kid from the block was walking late at night, one of the kids from the house outside asked, "Do you want to play with us?" and the boy who was walking replied with a foolish answer. he said sure, without knowing the consequences the pale little boy and his pale siblings invited him over for the barbeque. once he went inside he was never to be found again.
still fixing it but what do you think of it so far?
Much of Whitman's prose was guilty by the reason of it being fed by the interconnectedness of nature, and how we, as human beings, relate to this. We also see sensualism and egotism during his "Song of Myself" and "There Was A Child Went Forth". He does inquire in these, that he desires to incorporate all people, and he does talk about the meaning of self.
Also, we see this statement " I loaf and invite my soul, I lean and loaf at my ease observing a spear of summer grass.", Whitman 1049. In his poems, I personally feel though that Whitman was indeed not an egotist, at least for the most part, but mostly and sensualist with egotism implied in certain parts. His sensualistic behavior towards things gives the reader new understanding of a certain perspective.