I’m pretty sure the answer would be A. :)
In his "Letter from Birmingham Jail," King argues that "injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." The evidence he employs is that of racially discriminatory laws in the South. King argues that the existence of unjust laws such as segregation represent an injustice. And this unjustice is an obstacle for achieving equality and justice everywhere in the country. For example, if white people do not believe in segregation, this nonetheless means that they have to abide by the law, causing injustice. The appeal that he uses is logos, as he encourages us to think of the logic of the arguments put forward by lawmakers.
(I don't know if i should put it in full sentences so I'm not.)
Line 1- Home
Line 2- Safe, Secure
Line 3- still, active, loving
Line 4- windows, doors, rooms, people
Line 5- moving, playing, talking
Line 6- helpless, protective
Line 7- outside
(I tried. I would have done better if I understood how to do it better. but that's what I came up with. Hope it's good. I am a poet so yeah.)
I think the correct answer from the choices listed above is option A. <span>In "nefarious war" these walls built against the tartars refer to the tower of babel. Hope this answers the question. Have a nice day.</span>
Answer:
It is indeed hyperbole and not personification. <u>this is because the poet is asking Time to take away all his woes and laying the weight of wings of kindness on it.</u>
Explanation:
<u>Hyperbole is when a simple act is laden with something blown out of proportion</u>. here, the simple passage of time is said by the poet to be responsible for taking away his problems through its kindness, when the time is passing irrespective of his woes and does nothing else but pass.
it would have been personification if the winged feet of time in the quotation given, did not speed because of kindness. <u>the human qualities are laid on time by the poet and are not presented as a foregone conclusio</u>n. hence, it is more accurate to see this as hyperbole.