Answer:
wow this is hardnnenejeje
Your answer would be, An ELEGY, is a poem expressing sorrow for someone who has died.
Elegy - A poem of mourning, usually for someone who has died.
Ex: Oh Captain, Oh Captain! is an Elegy, for slain Abraham Lincoln.
Hope that helps!!!
<span>From my point of view the work on the theme in Anglo-Saxon poetics got off on what I always thought was the wrong foot. What Francis Peabody Magoun, Jr., called a theme was not what either I or Parry meant by the term. His meaning, nevertheless, was to prevail and is found in Riedinger's Speculum article—not under that name, however, but as a "cluster" of motifs. [1] Yet could it be that that is as close to my theme as can be expected in Anglo-Saxon poetry? Let us examine the proposition, because those who have sought "theme" there seem to have been frustrated, as was, for example, Francelia Clark, who has investigated this subject thoroughly. [2]
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The correct answer to this open question is the following.
You forgot to include the question. Here we just have a series of statements or an excerpt of a text. But you forgot to include the question. We do not know what you are asking for.
However, trying to help, we can comment on the following.
Thi excerpt of the story "Civil Peace," written by Chinua Achebe in 1971, describes the terror the family felt after the dark moments of the Nigerian Civil War that was fought from 1967 to 1970. Jonathan Iwegbu, the main character of the novel, got back to his former city and realized it was not as affected as other regions due to the war. So he takes his family back to repair his home. One night, robbers enter his home and take all of his money. Jonathan thinks that the robbery was a sign of God.