Answer:
D. The speaker, having experienced adversity, regards hope in a positive light, as it
never asked anything of him/her
Explanation:
This question refers to Emily Dickinson's poem "Hope Is The Thing With Feathers".
In the poem, the author uses metaphor, or, more precisely, extended metaphor to compare hope to a bird. Sweet singing of the bird can be heard even in the biggest storms which suggests that hope is always there, even in the hardest periods in life.
The last stanza tells us that the bird can be seen everywhere (the chilliest land and the strangest see) but it (the bird) never asks for anything of us, not a single crumb.
That means that it's not an effort to hope for something, it doesn't cost us anything, it doesn't make us a problem. One should always hope and the bird will forever sing to us, not asking for anything in return.
John once was a jester
he was always seen as a heckler
but he then met a girl in a dream
she was covered in orange cream
he found this to be extremely interesting
as she found her attire to be frustrating
he made an offer she couldn't resist
as he said he would solve her problem with a flick of the wrist
they both watched closely as he did his trick
he made her feel quite the fool as the watch on hist wrist began to tick
she was filled with wonder at what mysterious act he would do and that feeling soon began to fester
he began to laugh at this cruel trick as he said "I'll always be a jester".
We frequently read story books.
Answer:
it means something that is bare like for example your "bare" hands
Explanation:
its a word with a meaning that i know. but i haven't read the poem.