I'm not sure if this is the correct answer, but I would say furious.
Answer:
I don't see any mistakes except you didn't put a period after 'asked'. You're fine though, I believe. Also a great story!
Amanda Gorman wrote and performed "The Hill We Climb" to celebrate the 2021 inauguration of Joe Biden as 46th President of the United States. The poem celebrates the U.S. not as a "perfect union," but as a country that has the grit to struggle with its all-too-real problems. Progress, the poem argues, doesn't happen all at once: it's a slow and sometimes painful "climb" up the "hill" of justice, a climb that takes patience and humility. To this poem's speaker, change is hard work, but it's always possible: dedicated Americans can see—and be!—the "light" of a better future.
Hi Elise!
Sorry, I had to go offline for a while. Here are your answers:
♦ Outline- <span>used to organize information into main points and subpoints
</span>♦ Evidence- <span>facts or details that provide support for main points
</span>♦ Thesis Statement- <span>gives the main idea and suggests the organization of the essay
</span>♦ Parenthetical Documentation-
♦ Quotation- <span>a statement that uses the exact wording from a text
</span>♦ Works Cited- <span>a list of sources that you used in your essay
</span>
I hope they aren't too late. Good luck!☺
~Elisabeth
Answer:
the ancient tale
Explanation:
In this poem, the Swan is a metaphor for the spiritual pursuit of one who treads the path of self-realization. The metaphor refers to the ability of the bird to move between different planes of reality (earth, water, air) without clinging to any of them.
In the poem Kabir indicates a place where the swan can be free of doubt and sadness, this place would be the heaven that the author compares with an old tale in the passage:
"There, woods flourish in everlasting spring,
And its fragrance makes us move forward more and more.
Immersed in it, the heart, like a bee, was inebriated.
Immense in her, she no longer wants any joy"