Note: the translation of your poem may vary, so check the word choices before answering.
In the first stanza, the personification of hatred creates an image of a predator, a creature able to "vault" obstacles. Words like "vault," "pounce" and "track" add to this image. (Your translation might have "regards," "leaps," and "overtakes" -- but the idea is the same).
Personification is used later in the poem to contrast hatred with compassion, brotherhood, and doubt. Hatred, she writes "never tires" of being an executioner. Furthermore, it's "always ready," even if it must wait. In this way, he can wait for compassion and brotherhood to give way to violence.
Brotherhood, compassion (or empathy, depending on the translation) and doubt, she says, are "sluggish" and do not compel people to act in the way hatred does.
Answer:
Sample Response: Helen Keller could not see or hear. "With Anne Sullivan's help, Helen learned to communicate" ("Helen's Story"). Helen Keller described the day she met Anne Sullivan as "the most important day I remember in all my life" (Keller 23). Helen went on to become a very successful student and an inspiration to many people. [end]
Explanation
That's the sample response on Edge
<span>The correct answer is the final sentence. The final sentence of this paragraph -- Ben sighed with satisfaction as he finally reached his trailer and opened the front door -- indicates that Ben likes living in Happy Trails Park. The other sentences illustrate that this is nice place to live: there are well-tended gardens, beautiful flowers, etc. However, only the final sentence proves that Ben is happy there, because we are told he "sighed with satisfaction" upon reaching his trailer.</span>
Because Claudius was very untrustworthy.