Answer:
This question is asking for your opinion!!
Explanation:
2nd one why did Marcus have such a hard time in school I think
The author feels sympathy toward erickson
Answer:
<em>B. He is determined to find the treasure.</em>
Explanation:
In this excerpt from<em> Between the Silver and the Ash</em>, we are introduced to a part of the conversation between two friends Kenneth and Xavier. The impression that we can get from it is that Xavier is a person who easily gets interested in something new, leaving the previous forsaken. Knowing that his grandma wanted her special gift to him not only be the gift itself but a valuable lesson about persistence too. So, she left him a lot of traces that need a fair amount of time to be followed on the path to finding the gift, and Xavier is aware of that and determined to go till the end this time.
Answer:
The correct answer is The speaker in the former knows exactly what her goal is, while the speaker in the latter believes that she has already achieved it.
Explanation:
In the poem <em>Because I could not stop for Death</em> the goal of the speaker is totally clear.
What she wants is for death to lead her to eternity.
The problem is that she realizes that death was not really her faithful friend who would take her to eternity, but that it took her to what would now be her new home: her new grave, <em>“A Swelling of the Ground."</em> which leads the speaker to realize the coldness and cruelty that death has.
While in the poem <em>"Some keep the Sabbath going to Church"</em> we can see how the speaker is really happy with his goal, which is to spend his church day at home. <u>She prefers to hear the birds sing rather than hear a sermon. </u>She does not need to hear how she has to get to heaven, because for her she has already arrived. And <u>she sees it in the nature that surrounds it, and in the tranquility of her home while doing the things she likes.
</u>
Let's remember that<em> Emily Dickinson</em> was one of the greatest poetesses in history, and was characterized by her peculiar way of writing since her subjects were extravagant: she always talked about death and immortality.