I think the answer would be A
Answer:
The answer is that, the speaker wishes that <u>America could be like it was when Whitman was alive</u>
Explanation:
Ginsberg as someone who promotes diversity chose Walt Whitman as a hero and guide because he is a poet of everything and loves diversity like himself. ( In the 50’s, America is like Ozzie and Harriet: middle class, white, hard-working, etc. which was all about conforming to a certain standards, while Ginsberg was all about diversity).
<em>He hopes for the creation of America </em><u><em>big enough for individuality rather than the too much conformity</em></u><em> currently obtainable (Like American citizens should not worry about making money, but instead, they should worry about being themselves or people try to have a different sexual oreintation in an era that was uptight about sexuality).</em>
Answer:
The meaning (as I see it) is that life is hard, even sorrowful, but you must keep going.
Explanation:
"Great Nature"--whether it represents God, natural beauty (in a romanticist sense), or something else entirely--represents uncertainty. You are at its mercy, and you must find your path by doing. The idea quite resonates with me: that while you may despair and never want to wake, you must, and you must keep moving through your day because that's how you will find your path.
If this doesn't resonate with you I'd be happy to discuss and form a different interpretation, or even explain myself better, just let me know.
Answer:
He taught Pi to swim as a child and bestowed upon him his unusual moniker. He arranges for the author to meet Pi in person, so as to get a first-person account of his strange and compelling tale.