In my opinion, the correct answer is A. celebratory. Not just because the poem begins with the famous incantation "I celebrate myself, and sing myself", but because its very purpose is the celebration of a personal and collective identity. He celebrates a nation, a universe, nature, sex, human bonds, love, pride. He celebrates himself as Walt Whitman, but also as an epitome of a human being, and an epitome of a new American spirit.
<span>D.
"…and wandered far down the steep slopes amid the wild tangle of undergrowth, peering through the tree trunks and listening through the whistling and skirling of the wind and the restless beating of the branches for sight and sound of the marauders."
The language creates an uncertainty about what's going to happen and immerses the reader in the present moment, so that he/she feels as if she were in the story, watching for marauders as well. </span>
Answer:
It tells us how stories can be important to humans.
Explanation:
Evidence: "Psychologist Robyn Dawes went much further, suggesting humans are...' the primates whose cognitive 1 capacity shuts down in the absence of a story'...
"...jurors are influenced by the quality of the prosecution’s and defense’s... 'stories'... when deciding whether to find a defendant guilty."
"Even in science, we seek explanations, not mere descriptions; in history, we want a good narrative, not a mere sequence of events."
The correct answer is D. He uses pathos to appeal to the listeners' suspicion and fear of Germany.
Explanation
When a speaker uses Pathos in a speech he makes use of the emotions and empathy that causes his speech and charisma in the audience. Usually, these speeches are used by politicians or candidates to move large groups of people. In the fragment of the speech, Churchill refers to the characteristics of his enemy (German) as "there is no dirty trick he will not do" to arouse fear in the audience. Therefore, the correct answer is D. He uses pathos to appeal to the listeners' suspicion and fear of Germany.