Each guide was helpful, but we forgot to thank them.
You should use the plural pronoun, because we don't know whether the guides were only males, or females, or whether there were both sexes.
Answer:
Both passages deal with the same theme of the inevitability of death.
Explanation:
Both of the passages share the same theme of the inevitability of death.
"On Seeing the Elgin Stone", John Keats asserts the mortality of man and that death is something man or in any case, anyone can avoid. Likewise, William Wordsworth also emphasizes the inevitability of death in his poem "Ode on Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood". Both poets from the same Romantic period describes how things will all meet their end, even things that are believed to be immortal will eventually fade away.
Explanation:
His first statement in the poem does the contrasting, which says;
"Yesterday, I lay awake in the palm of the night".
In effect he was saying just as an innocent child goes to bed, so the victims were alive just the day before horrific event of September 11.
Further into the night the innocent child experiences a change, which was expressed with the words;
"A soft rain stole in, unhelped by any breeze". This saying indicates how the innocent people experienced a change that made them victims of a horrific event that claimed their lives.
The answer you are looking for is B, participle.
The best answer for this question would be:
oppression of women
The story does not revolve around the oppression of women
but instead it centers on how people have connections with another person and
how they are interacting with their environment addings tensions of human
emotions.