Answer:
A. The speaker is recalling, "with a sigh," how difficult it had been for him to choose the more traveled or the less traveled of the two roads. The forked road is a metaphor for the inherent duality in the natural world.
Explanation:
In this poem, the author talks about life through a metaphor. He describes life as a walk through the forest, in which a person has to decide what path he or she wants to take. The author reflects on the difficulty of making that choice. He also realizes that his life turned out to be a certain way because he chose a certain path. The two paths represent the possible choices people can make in life, and the impact that these have in determining their future.
I know this is late but the answer was The fire ate through the forest because in that sentence it was like the fire was living
Below are the answers:
<span>Both are beautiful in their own way.
</span><span>Both struggle in their environment.
</span><span> Both are rare and unusual.
Doodle and the Scarlet Ibis are comparable in that both are uncommon and delicate creatures. Wonderful in their own specific manner, yet strangely unique and uncommon. The Ibis is red and at last, Doodle is left in a contorted stance like the Ibis and he, as well, is red with blood.
The winged creature is indigenous to the tropics and does not have a place where he is, and Doodle can't satisfy his sibling's gauges of what a sibling ought to be. The demise of Doodle and the ibis have a few likenesses. They both pass on due in part to a tempest. They both are red after death.</span>
We just read this book so it depends on if the Socs and Greasers or S v.S or G v. G. For S v. G there were certain things that both groups couldn't do. The rules were established by both groups agreeing.
I think it is A and d let me know if i am wrong