Answer:
the answer would to not raise a false alarm
I'd say peacefulness and relaxation. There's no given reason for the trees to be sad or longing, and trees don't obviously exhale or breathe.
Richards celebrate the end of the civil war by marching in the streets with a flag and a bell
according to him, every men in his neighborhood has a flag and a bell in their household. He wanted to follow mr. Noah and other leaading citizens to walk around and sounding the bell as hard as he can.
ʜsʜsʜsʜsʜʜᴅʙxᴄʙᴄᴠʙᴅʙxʙᴅʙsʙʙsʙʙs
Answer:
The correct answer is Will he meet Lenore in the afterlife?
Explanation:
What the narrator is asking in these lines is whether he will see his beloved Lenore again.
When he says <em>"Tell this soul with sorrow laden if, within the distant Aidenn" </em>he refers to <u>himself</u> as regards <u>soul with sorrow laden</u>, (since he cannot bear the fact of having lost Lenore forever), and with <em>"the distant Aidenn”</em> is referring to Eden, in other words, to paradise.
<em>"A sainted maiden"</em> is how he imagines Lenore. But what the author does not support is that the crow makes him realize that he will never see her again. <em>"Nevermore".</em>