Answer:
"Whatever you want to say, all day, until night folds up and files it away" is a second stanza from <em>the Metaphor</em>, a poem written by Eve Merriam. The poem explores the theme of temporariness of all the things, and expresses hope for the future. What the author was trying to convey in this line is that everything we say (or do) goes away at the end of the day. Each new day is a new beginning, a new chance for each one of us to start over.
Answer:
To Motivate the Distraught Patriots to Fight for American Victory
Explanation:
Thomas Paine wrote The American Crisis which was published from 1776 to 1783. This was the time of American Revolution. The year 1776 in American history was crucial since the entire cause of the American rebels was on the verge of collapse. The revolution was going through uncertain times. At such tough time Paine aimed, through his pamphlet, at breathing strong motivation into the distraught patriots so that they could fight to ensure victory for American.
The poem has an abcb rhyme scheme.
Each stanza is a quatrain.
The poem contains two stanzas.
These three statements are correct. The poem has an abcb rhyme scheme. The rhyme scheme is determined by the last words of each line. The first line of the stanza is labeled a. The second line ending with shore does not rhyme with pass so it is labeled b. Stretched does not rhyme with either of the two preceding lines so it is labeled c. The last line of the stanza, more, rhymes with shore. It must be labeled b just like the second line. This results in the abcb rhyme scheme. It is the same in the second stanza. A quatrain is a stanza with four lines. Each of the two stanzas is made up of four lines so they are both quatrains.
Answer:
This is your English Teacher, stop using this website for answers, i will email youre guardians about this, and the whole classes to re-assure they dont use this!
Explanation:
Learn from now on, common sense.
Answer:
Algunos de los ideales que guiaron la lucha de Nelson Madela fueron equidad y justicia, servicio, dignidad y no racialismo.
Explanation: