<span>If
you've heard Blues Traveler's song "Run-Around" (released in 1994),
you've heard Poe alive and well in modern pop music. The song begins
with the line "Once upon a midnight, dearie,"- which is very similar to
the first line of Poe's "The Raven:" "Once upon a midnight dreary . . ."
The tune proceeds to describe the singer's longing for a woman who has
left him, just as Poe pined for his lost Lenore.
*Heavy metal band Iron Maiden included the song "Murders in the Rue
Morgue" — the title of one of Poe's best-known stories — on their 1981
album "Killers."
*Many television shows have borrowed plot lines or images from Poe,
including the spooky 1960s soap opera "Dark Shadows," the comedy series
"The Munsters," "Homicide," the 1990s police show set in Baltimore, and
perhaps most famous of all, the animated hit "The Simpsons." During a
second season Simpsons episode, James Earl Jones read part of "The
Raven" while Homer as the narrator and Bart as the raven acted out the
poem.
*In 1945, the Mystery Writers of America, Inc. established an award to
recognize outstanding contributions to various categories of mystery,
crime and suspense writing. These awards are known as The Edgar Allan
Poe Awards. The statuette that winners receive is called an Edgar.
*National Football League 2000 Super Bowl champions are named the
Baltimore Ravens, after Edgar Allan Poe's famous poem "The Raven." After
all, the poem is about the torment and anguish of fierce longing,
something Baltimore football fans know all too well.
i think thats what you were asking
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C. By showing how a character reacts or interacts to his/her surroundings
Hope this helps! I’d also want to know if this is correct!
Answer:
places of origin
Explanation:
nationalities is the place one is born or resides in for a long period of time
Answer:
Millions of people are expected to watch the Paralympic Games in Rio de Janeiro over 11 days this September. Chances are you will see a swimmer with one leg on the blocks next to another swimmer with two legs and two arms. So how that can be fair?
the secret is a process called classification.
Classification underlies all Paralympic sport, yet the concept – and its practical application – is possibly the greatest barrier to the broader community’s understanding of the Paralympics.
Classification is the process of allocating athletes into classes so that they compete against others whose impairment affects them to a similar degree in their sport.
Explanation: