Answer:
journeys
wanders
Explanation:
A word with connotative meaning is a word that has more than one meaning as used in a sentence.
In "The child is not dead," Jonker writes the child grown to a man treks through all Africa." Some of the connotative meanings of treks are journeys and wanders.
To trek is to move some distance from one place to another
The sentence in which the underlined infinitive phrase functions as a subject is the last one - to quickly move large groups of people is the purpose of public transportation.
<em>To quickly move </em>is the infinitive phrase, and it is a subject.
Porphyria's Lover is a dramatic monologue that tells us the speaker's thoughts.
There is no conflict resolution: the poem ends with Porphyria dead by her lover's hand. No one has come upon them by the end of the poem and he has not been punished. What happens after this scene ends is unresolved.
There is no dialogue, either. The speaker of the poem tells us that Porphyria "calls" the speaker, but he does not relate her exact words. There is no dialogue in the poem.
Finally, there are no formal stage directions. The speaker does describe several actions happening during the poem -- as when the speaker tells us he strangles Porphyria with her hair -- but we do not have formal stage directions as one would get in a play.
<span>Depending on which excerpt of the line you are indicating, William Cullen Bryant's "Thanatopsis" is a theme between a man and the natural world. It is a poem about death. It also talks about nature. It is believed that human beings come and go. On the other hand, nature is always there - the mountains, rivers, seas, forests.</span>