The everlasting question, cats or dogs. Some favor one over the other; like them both or don’t like either of them. I personally prefer cats for many reasons. They have a lot of personalities, they are more independent and their owner’s health benefits from them.
In my opinion, cats have more personality than dogs because they don’t follow your every command. If they want to knock a cup over they’ll do it regardless of you telling them not to. If they don’t want to do something you can’t force them to do it.
Secondly, cats are more independent than dogs because you don’t have to take them for walks to keep them healthy. Cats can also use the bathroom by themselves rather than having to be let out as dogs do.
Lastly, humans health benefit from having a cat. They reduce stress, help the immune system, lower risk of heart disease and many more.
For these reasons, cats are the superior animal of the two.
Good luck!!
Answer:
B. He wanted to make the poem more concise and direct.
Explanation:
Ezra Pound wrote a 30-line poem where he narrated his experience in a Paris metro station but he discarded this version because he did not like it.
Much later, he again tried narrating his experience, this time making the narration shorter than the first, but he again discarded it.
Finally, after reading Japanese hiakus, Mr. Pound finally wrote his experience in a two-line version that has now become immensely popular because of its length.
So, he reduced his poem from a 30-lined one to two lines because he wanted to make the poem more concise and direct.
The first stanza of the poem, The Rape of the Lock indicates that the poem is mock-heroic. Pope establishes at the beginning that the poem mocks the heroic styles of love and war. For example, "What dire offence, from am'rous Causes spring/ What mighty Contest rise from Trivial things". The phrases, 'am'rous Causes' and 'Trivial things' indicate the mock nature of this poem.
Answer:
Phantom???
Explanation:
I have said it a few time to myself and it makes sense.
Answer:
What this quotation means to me is that the mans evilness is on the earth. I think the author wrote this because he wanted to tell about the mans evilness.
Explanation: