I'm a prisoner on the ground
With no one to stand around
People come and go
And I yell out with a moan
"Please help me
I need to be free"
But no one looks at me
For even one bit
Next thing I know
I start to get hit
I yell out loud
Out into the crowd
"Help me! Please!"
But they back away
And so I say,
"I don't have a disease!"
One moment later
The traitor comes out
And that's when I start to shout
"Traitor! Traitor! You betrayed me! Even when I was in need!"
But he just stayed still
And wouldn't move until
The guards push him away
And that's when he started to sway
Side to side he went
All the while looking content
I couldn't believe my eyes
Everything he told me were lies
I started to rise
To start to go
And wouldn't you know
He held me by the arm
Said, "I don't want to do you any harm."
The last thing I remembered
Was that he got dismembered.
I dont have a drawing but look up prisoner on ground with guards around
<span>#1) How are love and affection portrayed in In Memoriam, A. H. H. by Alfred, Lord Tennyson?
Answer: In “Memoriam, A. H. H.” Love and Affections are portrayed as Everlasting. This is explicitly depicted when Tennyson explains his idea of how his good friend Arthur’s death does not mean he will cease to exist inside of him and is now in a better place. He apparently reached a level of immortality in a christian sense.
<span>I hope it helps, Regards.</span></span>
The best type of organization for explaining step by step, how to get to your house from school is chronological. The correct answer is option D. Arranging the steps in a chronological order means putting it one after another based on the time it happened. A particular timeline or sequence of events is being observed.
Answer:
B. The lovely young ballet company
Explanation:
I will be completly honest! I am horrible at predicates so I looked it up and here is an example off the internet.
Here's an example. In the sentence "The wall is purple," the subject is "wall," the predicate adjective is "purple" and the linking verb is "is." So, it's subject, verb, and predicate adjective.
pred·i·cate
See definitions in:
All
Grammar
Logic
nounGRAMMAR
/ˈpredəkət/
the part of a sentence or clause containing a verb and stating something about the subject (e.g., went home in John went home ).
"predicate adjective"
verb
/ˈpredəˌkāt/
1.
GRAMMAR•LOGIC
state, affirm, or assert (something) about the subject of a sentence or an argument of a proposition.
"a word that predicates something about its subject"
Answer: Ish believe its
C London shares White Fang's thoughts and feelings directly with the reader.
Explanation: