Answer:
among the many monuments to John F. Kennedy, perhaps the most striking is the Sixth Floor Museum in Dallas, in the building that was once the Texas School Book Depository. Every year, nearly 350,000 people visit the place where Lee Harvey Oswald waited on November 22, 1963, to shoot at the president’s motorcade. The museum itself is an oddity because of its physical connection to the event it illuminates; the most memorable—and eeriest—moment of a visit to the sixth floor is when you turn a corner and face the window through which Oswald fired his rifle as Kennedy’s open car snaked through Dealey Plaza’s broad spaces below. The windows are cluttered once again with cardboard boxes, just as they had been on that sunny afternoon when Oswald hid there.
Answer:
C. An exploration of how love changes over time.
Explanation:
In the poem "To My Dear and Loving Husband", the poet Anne Bradstreet talks about the love she has for her husband. She delves into the long-lasting and deep feeling she has with her husband. And she wished that their love stays the same forever, <em>"that when we live no more we may live ever". </em>
On the other hand, Grace Chua's poem "Love Song, With Two Goldfish" reveals the short love of the two fishes. The female fish is not happy with her partner, who is unable to give <em>"a life beyond the (bowl)".</em> Though she may have been in love with him before, but now, her love has gone <em>"belly-up".</em>
These two poems deals with the same theme of the exploration of how love changes over a period of time.