Answer:
In the quote when I count my blessings I count you twice, 'you' refers to a person who acts a blessing in someone's life. This quote refers to that a person who is a blessing acts to be special and that a person considers him/her to be more than a blessing
Answer:
The answer is most likely A
Explanation:
I eliminated the rest out the only one that would make sense is a. It’s not c or b because it has nothing to do with tying a sound to the character. And it’s not d because motif is theme so the sound would be overall not just one specific character hope this helped :D
Blue and yellow make green
Answer:
Love Song by T. S. Eliot
In the opening line, the speaker states, "Let us go then, you and I."
The "you" here refers to the woman that J. Alfred Prufrock desired to have a sexual encounter with. As the narrator, Prufrock was soliciting and trying to convince his lover to go along with him to the red-light district, where they could pin themselves together like butterflies in sexual euphoria. Just like all adolescents, many people are unaware of the proper place of sex in marriage. As a result, many are usually drawn to experience sex in fantasy. It has been proven psychologically and medically that sex is very good and healthy, but only in marriage.
Explanation:
The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock is a modernist poem written by T.S. Eliot in 1917. In it, Eliot fully explored and indicated the youthful exuberance felt by adolescents and their moral ambivalence, especially with regard to sex vis.-a-vis their Christian upbringing.