A central rhetorical principle requiring one's words and subject matter be aptly fit to each other, to the circumstances and occasion (kairos), the audience, and the speaker. Though initially just one of several virtues of style ("aptum"), decorum has become a governing concept for all of rhetoric.
Im 5’3
but some how i feel as tall as a tree.
I think alot so my mind is never free.
I love to draw
And drink water out of metal staws
I care about the earth
And I’ve been a really kind person ever since my birth.
<span>A) It shifts from first person point of view to third person point of view with the sentence: "That was the last sun that shone on Black Hawk."
The use of "I", "we", and "our" through the first part of the paragraph is what makes it first person point of view. When it switches at this sentence, the pronouns shift to "he", which is what makes it third person point of view. </span>
As per the author, the forested areas are soaked with small, great occasions continually. The winds are the amazing conductors of all the enchantment that Muir finds in the California woodland. His motivation with such depictions is to stir the peruser's eye to the flow of the forested areas. The woods is alive in far more fantastic routes than just photosynthesis.