The main theme of "The Wanderer" involves the d. pain of homelessness.
The man in "The Wanderer" is deprived of a permanent home, forced to face the elements of nature. By the end of the poem the natural elements of the world are twisted into looking like destructive, monstrous things that beat on buildings and people alike.
Answer:
If you're talking about "Dreams" by Langston Hughes, that poem uses two key metaphors: "broken winged bird that cannot fly" and a "barren field frozen with snow".
Answer:
The writing style goes from 3rd person to 1st person
Explanation:
When the narrator referred to 'no man' it is in third person POV, then he refers to 'my work' which is in first person POV.
Answer:
to make sure the claim is clear and precise is an important strategy
Answer:
I suppose it depends on what the ritual is. In most Religions, if a person is performing (what I think is Ritual), and they believe it wholeheartedly, it is never going to get old. I imagine it depends on the Religion & Ritual.
Other sorts of “rituals” like how many times you brush your bottom and top teeth could become more like “obsessive compulsive disorder”. Some people I know treat their IPhone like a sort of “ritualistic” activity, looking and checking without any real need.
It will depend upon what the Ritual is, and what it is used in or for.