Answer and Explanation:
The poem Adam by Hugh cook is a great piece, having a statistical approach. If we see the poem in terms of formalism, we will see the poem as a distinct work free from the environment, social pressure, and any other outer perspective. From the poem's title, we can say that the whole poem is about one prominent character name, Adam. He is the very first person in heaven who has eaten the forbidden fruit. Eden has been compared to this earth, today as we crave for something interesting, as we have many things to do to cope up with our mood swings but at that having no exciting thing to do, Adam has eaten that forbidden fruit because of the instinct he has in himself.
If we analyze the poem from a feminist perspective, we have to see the environmental effect, which urged Adam to eat that fruit.
By seeing the poem in term of Feminism, we can say that Adam has urged to get that forbidden fruit because of the serpent, and at the end of the poem, it has been shown through words that there was one more character behind him when Adam was walking out of the Eden;
Something on two legs
Is running after him.
Cyrus led a revolt against the Median Empire and by 549 BC he had completely conquered Media. He now called himself the "King of Persia." ... In 540 BC, after routing the Babylonian army, Cyrus marched into the city of Babylon and took control. He now ruled all of Mesopotamia, Syria, and Judea.