Answer:
"And when I am formulated, sprawling on a pin,
When I am pinned and wriggling on the wall,
Then how should I begin
To spit out all the butt-ends of my days and ways?"
Explanation:
Oh, this poem is so good..
I've selected the portion in the poem when the narrator uses metaphor to compare himself to an insect. In this part, he asks what will happen when he is "pinned and wriggling," like a butterfly or beetle that's pinned to a bug collection. Eliot uses this so artfully, my nerd hackles are raised. He's asking -- when I am helpless, uncomfortable, and all my deepest self is exposed -- how shall I explain myself, and who shall I be then?
<u>divert </u><u>-</u><u> </u><u>to </u><u>cause </u><u>something </u><u>to </u><u>change </u><u>direction, </u><u>etc</u>
Answer:
D.life:death
Explanation:
i don't know i guess but they mostly link together and this one best sounds like an analogy and as many righters use life and death in there books and there is a saying that goes way back where an insane righter wrote this on the walls "life is a cycle of death we all just die and that help the living so life is a cycle of death"
I believe that the explicit message is that the author’s inspiration
for Merlin’s voice was the owl outside his window.
In the excerpt from the article "Vision, Voice and the
Power of Creation: An Author Speaks Out," T. A. Barron states that he had
difficult time finding the right voice, but at the end, the inspiration was the
sound of an owl outside his window: “I finally heard the voice of Merlin thanks
to a surprising source: the haunting, mysterious hooting of a great horned owl
outside the window of my Colorado home.”