Remark
Ms. Dickinson is saying that hope never alters, not does it stop. It is wordlessly in our hearts and souls where it resides while with us. It is wordless but eternal.
Answer
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Answer:
No, the imagery of past in the poem 'Rain on the Roof' is different from the imagery of 'The Road Not Taken'.
Explanation:
'Rain on the Roof' is a poem written by Coates Kinney. <u>The past imagery in this poem is about the wonderful thoughts of the speaker of his childhood, of his mother</u>.
'The Road Not Taken' is a poem written by Robert Frost. The poem talks about the regretfulness of past decisions that the speaker has taken. <u>The past imagery in this poem is of regret and sadness. </u>
<u>So, the past imageries of both the poem are not similar as they contrast with each other in terms of tone. The past imagery of the poem 'Rain on the Roof' is of love and sweet memories of mother. Whereas, the past imagery of 'The Road Not Taken' is sad and filled with the regrets of speaker's decision that he made in the past.</u>
Answer:
The Birth of Food Culture
Everybody has to eat. It’s obvious, right? And eating has been a large part of every human enterprise in existence. (Clearly the Magna Carta was not written on an empty stomach and World War II was not won by a starving army.) So it might surprise you that humans have only really thought critically about food in the last couple centuries.
Explanation:
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