Answer: There are 2 specific things one receives with Fire - Light and Heat.
Light is fairly obvious I think, to build a blaze to see by...
There is an idiom that says “to build a fire under someone (to get them to do something)”; they are lazy or an answer must be found quickly; a sense of urgency. In WWII, it meant to simply “Hurry!”, “Build a fire under that Pilot”, as in a rescue of men surrounded.
I hope this is what you are looking for.
Explanation:
Answer: C is the correct answer
Explanation:
All of the above for question 3 and for 6 i think its the first 3
The poem has a ring structure - that is, it begins and ends with the same stanza. This technique is precisely what makes it so interesting, as we the cremation is introduced first in the title, then in the first stanza, and reiterated with the last, repeated stanza. Once the conflict is resolved, we read the final stanza (which was also the first) with relief. It even gets a humorous overtone, as we know now that Sam never really died, therefore the morbid cremation from the poem's beginning never happened either.
Answer:
The final parts of a story in which loose ends are tied up after the climax and conflict have been cleared. (See a plot diagram for more clarification).