The answer should be A: Having been neglected for years, he dies content when he knows that Odysseus has returned.
such a good doggo :)
A frosty rime was on his head, and on his eyebrows, and his wiry chin. He carried his own low temperature always about with him...(Metaphor)
I am as giddy as a drunken man
I am as merry as a school boy
I am as happy as an angel (Similies)
Answer:
The speaker's perspective is that of a loving father, happy to entertain and play around with her daughters. He expressed his caring and endless love for them throughout the whole poem.
Explanation:
The poem "The Children's Hour" is written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow about a father and his daughters' relationship. The poem presents a caring and deeply emotional love a father has for his daughters.
The speaker in the poem is an unnamed man, probably the father of the three girls. He comments about himself as "an old mustache as I am." But through his reaction to his daughters bursting into his room, suggests he is a loving father. This can be inferred from the lines that express his feelings for his daughters-
<em>"voices soft and sweet"</em>
<em>"They almost devour me with kisses"</em>
<em>"And there will I keep you forever".</em>
These three lines from the poem are evidence of the father's/ speaker's love for the three little girls- Alice, Allegra, and Edith.
The flower symbolizes a person no longer young and thinking about life.
C ( took the quiz in my class)