Answer:
My favorite sandwich is grilled cheese, but we didn't bring any of those
Explanation:
Answer:
Impressed with Henson's experience and enthusiasm to see more of the world, Robert Peary hired him almost immediately as his personal assistant and invited him to take part in his next assignment. On leave from the Navy to do more exploring in Greenland, Peary once again invited Henson to join his party.
Explanation:
Answer:
In this poem, the irony is that the last thing the author can perceive while waiting for her death is a fly buzzing while waiting for death to come to her.
Explanation:
As is already known, Emily Dickinson was known for dealing with subjects such as death. The fascination that this author had with the death led her to write great poems that were highly recognized in the environment.
One of them is "I Heard a Fly Buzz When I Died".
While she waits for death, and for the "<em>King</em>" who comes to look for her (which could be interpreted as God), the visit she receives is not from any divinity, but rather from a fly, which ironically represents the opposite of the divine, or to a paradise. The fly is the one that comes to rest on her dead flesh while everyone is there with her waiting for that moment.
In the poem the author is comparing her experience of killing an innocent non poisonous spider to the police killing innocent unarmed people (suggesting of color because of the "brown" recluse reference). She is trying to explain that killing the harmless spider just because she was scared doesn't make it right and the same thing goes for police and people of higher authority.