Answer:
I believe the answer is semantic differential, though I apologize if I'm incorrect
Explanation:
Answer:
A. The speaker asks the raven if he will see Lenore again in heaven.
Explanation:
The Raven is a story that creates a contradictory atmosphere by the desire to remember and the desire to forget. It exposes the lover's loneliness, despair, melancholy, sadness shown through his own madness. All these feelings, fueled by the crow's words "never again".
The lover reveals the lack of his beloved, and the words of the raven "never again" culminate in the despair of the lover, whose anguish and sadness create in him a great madness, whose delusions are based on the loss of his beloved and the loneliness he suffers from knowing that he has lost his friends, his hopes and soon his visitor, the raven.
Answer:
I don't know
Explanation:
This question does not have enough information for me to answer it.
Hey You!
I believe the answer would be: The interpretation moves farther away from the text.
Answer:
In her poem, "In a Queen's Domain", Piatt seems to be inferring that the world is not always perfect.
<u>“And my subject, the dove, coos on, / Though my hand creep close to her nest.”</u> tries to show that the world is made up of both the good and the bad people. The dove signifies the people that have a pure heart even though they are surrounded by people that seek to hurt them. The hand creeping close to the nest signifies the people that try to take advantage of the pure heart of the doves.
Piatt is depicted as imperfect and human because she conveys her realist views about nature and society. She does not seem interested in adhering to the romanticization of nature and women.