What is significant about the image of grass covering people who sacrified their lives in war is that war is portrayed as something simple, unadorned, and unremarkable (B).
This is a passage from the poem "Grass" by Carl Sandburg. In this poem, Sandburg emphasizes the need to remember the lives of the people who have died in war for freedom and, at the same time, chastises those who take their freedom for granted. Sandburg uses personification to give the grass human features to portray that it acts as a cover of the deaths and the destruction by the war.
At the end of the poem, it reads "I am the grass/Let me work". This entails that all the horror of the war can be eradicated by the work of nature. In the end, grass will cover everything, the bodies and the destruction, but the devastation caused by the wars should not be forgotten.
Sports hep is stay fit and like other organisations it helps us make friends and enjoy doing thing that we like or will help us in life
Answer:
By the end of the novel, nick leaves the east for the midwest because he views the midwest as a place of traditional values and attention to morality.
Explanation:
Nick Carraway is the narrator in the novel "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald. By the end of the story, he returns to the midwest, leaving the east after going through a great deal. While living close to New York and after mingling with the high society from that time, Nick has seen it all. All types of sins, criminals accusing criminals, betrayers pointing fingers at betrayers. He has seen a world of vapid people whose only purpose is to party their troubles away. They drink, dance, gossip, have affairs, and despise one another, all in an effort to forget their own faults, their own sadness. After the main character, Gatsby, is killed as a result of a provoked misunderstanding, Nick has had enough. He's done with the hypocrisy of the wealthy. He goes back to a place of traditional values and attention to morality.