Good morning! <3
Okay so when we look at the question it is asking what Whitman and Dickinson had in common, And Walt (Whitman's first name) Had a lot of things in common with Emily (Dickson's first name). They both seemed to focus on the same themes and characteristics in writing as each-other.
Your answer would come down to D. They both challenged the status quo of poetic expression.
~Littlebird17 ♥
The first part when he says he "shall meet my fate" could allude to a choice of joining. This could allude to an acceptance of fate sort of standard and that he made his decision. Another is the last two lines when he says "Nor law... nor cheering crowds." This quotation shows that the government, the duty to his country, the men around him, and those at home cheering them on did not persuade him to fight. In the second last line this is known when he states "nor law nor duty bade me fight".
Answer:
Floats downstream, the trade winds soft, and dawn-light lawn.
Explanation:
These three are all metaphors of freedom. These are what the free bird did and encountered in the poem.
The caged bird experienced 2. his narrow cage and 5. the grave of dreams.
(credited by brainly.com/question/1995468)
The answer maybe B hopefully it’s right sorrry!!
In the Sioux creation story, the Creating Power flood the world because the creatures in it were bad and were destroying it. Then It put all of the living creatures on it again and humans as well, and told them that if they made the world bad and ugly once again, It would destroy that world too.
This creation story resembles the Christian flood myth, a story that the Europeans brought with them to the New World.