Answer: The beauty of nature causes the author's "perfect exhilaration."
Explanation:
The Nature is Ralph Waldo Emerson's essay about the appreciation of nature, written from a transcendentalist point of view.
In lines 1-20, the author explains his experience upon seeing a wide, open space of "bare" ground. He simply appreciates the beauty of nature he sees, which enables him to clear his mind. As he describes it, he becomes ''nothing'', and is unified with nature. He does not have any thoughts on his mind, and becomes "a part or particle of a God."
Answer : (C) description
there is nothing to compare/contrast
the only cause is him being born and effect is his life which doesn’t work
no problem just his story
In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, Atticus never has to
rethink his position on an issue. He is very level-headed all throughout. In
comparison with most of Maycomb’s citizens, he is the only one who is least
infected by prejudice. He is not racist as he goes to a black community to
deliver news. He also lets his children go to Calpurnia’s church. He doesn’t
have problems with the circumstances wherein his children are looked after by a
black woman.