The repetition of the line, "Brennan<span> on the moor/Brennan on the moor/bold and undaunted stood young Brennan on the moor" in the opening and closing stanzas calls the reader to remember the name of the man in this epic-style poem as we begin and end his tragic story.
In the opening lines, the repetition is quite like a battle cry where the person spoken about is seen as our hero. As readers we repeat his name to honor him and call forth his story.
In the closing lines, the repetition is meant to be an homage to the hero of our poem who has died.</span>
Answer: B A mother's conversation with her son reveals that an overdependence on technology suppresses creative thought.
Explanation:
The Machine Stops is about a future where human beings were now totally reliant on a Machine to take care of all their needs as they simply relax and talk to each other through screens about ideas.
The story follows Vashti and her son Kuno. Kuno insists that she visit him which she does not want to but eventually agrees to. When she does he tells her of the surface and how the machine is not all it seems. She eventually leaves and years later the machine stopped working.
Throughout the story we see that an overdependece on technology supresses creative thought because with humans so reliant on the machine, there is no need to think for themselves. It was so bad that in one instance a man did not know how to pick up a book that had fallen from his hand because he was out of his rooms where the machine would have picked it for him.
Answer:
Last year's car wash raised more than $500.
Explanation:
I believe its the same as