Answer:
It’s good to guard your faith, nor let your grief come forth
Until it cannot call for help, nor help but heed
The path you’ve placed before it. It’s good to find your grace
In God, the heavenly rock where rests our every hope.
Explanation:
This poem, found in the Exeter Book, a manuscript of Anglo-Saxon poetry,
is about a grieving man who wanders in exile since the death
of his lord and kinsmen. His journey is cold, lonely, and extremely harsh.
By the end, there´s a speaker who claims that only faith in God is a consolation for earthly suffering.
A.) Their
Their sister is happy to babysit, so you mustn't worry about it.
Their is the 3rd person plural adjective. It is used to describe something or someone that belongs to them.
They're is a contraction of "they are" and it is most often followed by a present participle or a verb that ends with -ing.
In "chicago" , Sandburg use rhyming and rhythm in his verbs. The usage of this verbs make "chicago" is really interesting to read and the readers can't help but to feel some sort of excitement by reading it
The viewpoint gathered from the passage is:
Sarah’s determination to hide with her brother rather than wait for the Germans is admirable.
Explanation:
Sarah begins the passage by wondering if the brother is going to sit there and let the Germans take him away and then says that surely she would not let that happen.
This is the line that sets up the passage for what is to be narrated for the whole passage which is her plans and her determination to save her brother from sure death in the German death camps.
It is her foresight that has allowed her to understand what is going to happen and she willingly takes steps to avoid it.