The effect the word "atom" in the poem gives is, it emphasizes the narrator’s belief that every parcel of the earth belongs to everyone.
The poet will "sing myself" since the word atom implies that "what I accept you shall assume," because "every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you." The poet lounges on the grass while allowing his soul to express itself. He says that because he and his parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents were all born here, he was "made from this earth."
His two most well-known compositions are The Prelude, a Romantic epic poem that charts the "evolution of a poet's mind," and The Lyrical Ballads, which he co-wrote with Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Wordsworth grew to love nature's "wonderful shapes" from an early age. Wordsworth also states that his own poetry are express "the spontaneous overflow of enormous feelings.
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I think it was improvident of him not to set aside a part of his earning for a rainy day.
Alice has experienced many odd things since falling down a rabbit hole and things continue to get weirder from there so it's only respectable that she's starting to think not everything is impossible. Even in this scene we experience another impossible thing; "n<span>ot much larger than a rat-hole: she knelt down and looked along the passage into the loveliest garden you ever saw...wander about among those beds of bright flowers and those cool fountains..." Notice how it says flower beds and fountains. If the door that led to this place was the size of a rat-hole what on earth could've gone through the hole and planted the garden and created a fountain? That is yet another impossible thought just from the passage. Alice has every right to think there must be a way to get inside, afterall, someone had to be inside to put everything there, right?
(Feel free to copy/paste this as your answer, I don't mind.)
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I believe the answer would be the first option :)
The answer is C. Substantial. The prefix is ‘sub’