I bequeath myself to the dirt to grow from the grass I love,
AND
If you want me again look for me under your boot-soles.
A realist looks at the world for what it is. In these lines Whitman is being a realist because when he dies he will be buried. He will be under the ground and under people's shoes. Also, when you die you return to the dirt and your decaying body feeds the grass. The other lines do not directly address death even though they talk to the reader about the relationship of the speaker to the reader after he has passed.
Well according to me the second phrase describes the passage above best
Answer:
personification
In this line from Walt Whitman's poem "I Hear America Singing," personification is used. Personification is a figure of speech, or indirect way of conveying an idea, that represents a non-human thing as if it were human so as to give human qualities or traits to it, often by way of a metaphor.
Explanation:
For MLA it should be “c,” the last name followed by page number. For other styles like APA it will be different.
I think its D because it says paths of sea currents are paths or the sea