Answer:
The correct answer is: Cupid can appear in many forms.
Explanation:
In this poem, Ralph Waldo Emerson shares his thoughts about love and its transcendental nature by comparing the laws of men and laws of the church regarding the human spirit.
He states that Cupid can come in different appearances and forms, as love occurs differently in people's hearts, so Cupid is basically present all around us, in or lives and in our hearts. His appearances depend on us, our characteristics and personal point of view, which are creating our love and our love story.
In "The feather pillow" by Horacio Quiroga when the parasites don't have a human to feed on they usually are small, they are parasites of feathered creatures. This parasite, in particular, has been feeding on Alicia's blood, that is why it became so monstrous. We learn about this in the last parragraph of the story.
A comparison and contrast purpose used in nonfiction writing