The answer to this question is in Auden's words "for instance". His poem is not specifically about Icarus and his tragedy. It transcends this particular story, elevating its message to the highest, universal level. The poem is about suffering as an integral constituent of life. People are often completely unaware of other people's suffering. The Icarus motif is just an example, albeit a very drastic one. It serves as the poem's climax. The "delicate ship" is on its course and it keeps sailing, although the crew must have seen "a boy falling out of the sky". In other words, the strange death of a young boy changes nothing in the course of other people's lives. That is why, unlike Williams' poem, this one doesn't even have Icarus in its title, but the Museum. It deals with the relations of life vs. death and art vs. reality, rather than Icarus' tragic story.
Well it can be in a bigening of a sentence but some use it as lower case.
Answer:
- <u>Passive speech.</u>
Explanation:
'Passive speech' is exemplified as the type of expression which is preserved or sheltered by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution that outlines or abridges the 'freedom of speech' along with some reasonable restrictions over the content and potential to deliver or speak.
Passive speech is not directly associated with 'speaking the words or phrases actually' but actually conveying the idea or message with the limitations being followed and these limitations included 'no discrimination, obscenity, illegal conduct, defamation, etc. Such a speech allows displaying the consequences of a particular action without taking the name(defaming or expressing untruth), someone.