i think A but i am not to sure, i know that it can mean after or like your performing something
Answer:
I think Chruchill used the phrase a second time because that way that phrase could be meaning something important or because he wanted to make a rhyme.
Explanation:
In poem "712" Emily Dickinson personifies death. "Because I could not stop for death he kindly stopped for me". The narrator is giving human characteristics to death, "He" stops for her with his carriage, they slowly drive past common or everyday locations and scenes. "We passed the school where children strove at recess". Dickinson describes "him", (death), as a calm and polite character: "We slowly drove – He knew no haste
/And I had put away
/My labor and my leisure too
/For His Civility". The personification of death, it's civilized manners, create a specific impact. We don't sense death as a violent situation, the narrator does not suffer, feel pain or anguish, while experiencing death. In the poem Death is a more like a guide that takes her on a slow ride. Nevertheless, there is a sense of strangeness, of darkness, since the narrator is being guided towards the end of her life.
Diamond in a ring as a recreation/copy of something can never be authentic