Answer: Symbolism takes something that is usually concrete and associates or affixes it to something else in order to give it a new and more significant meaning.
Answer: Areas of defense in times of war
Explanation:
The except speaks of the potential of national unity in the United States being shattered as a result of a lack of a common enemy that the World Wars and Communism gave them.
The Fault lines in the excerpt refer to demarcations between opposing sides in the World Wars and in the Cold War that people then gathered behind to fight against their enemy. This made these lines become Areas of defense in essence that everyone came behind in solidarity to defeat their World War and Cold War enemies.
Answer:
We feel, conceive or reason, laugh or weep; Embrace fond woe, or cast our cares away
Explanation:
An English poet Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote an essay "A Defence of Poetry" in 1821. This essay was first published in 1840 in letters from abroad, translations by Edward Moxon in London. In the essay, Shelley claims that "poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world" and suggests that emotions experienced in life are constantly changing.
The lines from "Mutability" that can also be seen as a reflection of this idea are as follows:
We feel, conceive or reason, laugh or weep; Embrace fond woe, or cast our cares away
Answer:
"Be quiet, Gretel," said Hansel, "do not distress yourself, I will soon find a way to help us."
"Be comforted, dear little sister, and sleep in peace, God will not forsake us,"
Explanation:
Both o the sentences show that Hansel cared. He comforted his sister through his words.
Do you have an excerpt from the story?