The speaker compares “Imagination” in the poem, to a soaring bird through a variety of forces in the universe. He believes, that there are a lot of advantages of having an imagination, it keeps you sane and your ideas can spread like wildfire through the process. Thus, option "A" is correct.
<h3>What is the theme of the poem "On Imagination"?</h3>
In the poem "On Imagination" by Phyllis Wheatley, imagination was compared to that of a soaring bird probably because the bird can reach the highest of mountains, the clouds and even beyond the sky. Just like the imagination, the bird is limitless and with no boundaries. The bird can see everything up and out there that cannot be seen by common folks much like the imagination wherein everything is possible and anything and everybody exists.
The bird just like the imagination flies so high to the vast outer space seeing wonders and beauties as they travel and fly leaving those in time when the imagination needs to go back to reality and the bird to his home.
Thus, option "A" is correct.
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Answer:
C. As a practicing physician, I know this new treatment works.
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Answer:
<h3>People captured for slavery, folks were full of misery, looked the same as the other people from Africa are factual.</h3><h3>Shed their wings, forgot about flying, who could fly kept their power are fictional.</h3>
Explanation:
- In "The People Could Fly," by Virginia Hamilton, she presents the story about the suffering and violence of the enslaved people in a folklore genre.
- She presents factual events such as 'people captured for slavery, folks were full of misery, and looked the same as the other people from Africa' to address the suffering and atrocity experienced by the African-Americans during slavery.
- And at the same, the narrator adds fictional details such as 'shed their wings, forgot about flying, and who could fly kept their power' as an element of folklore in the story.