Answer:
I believe the experience of reading the poem aloud is different because:
The sounds and rhythms of the poem are easier to understand when it is read aloud.
Explanation:
"How Do I Love Thee" is a poem by English poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning, of the Romantic Movement. The poem has a beautiful rhyme scheme: ABBAABBACDCDCD. <u>The rhyme scheme is easy to notice when reading the poem silently, however, when we read it aloud, we can better notice its rhythm. The poet used a technique called enjambment, which is the continuation of a sentence across a line break. </u>Take a look at the lines below:
<em>I love thee to the depth and breadth and height
</em>
<em>My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight
</em>
<em>For the ends of being and ideal grace.</em>
<u>See how the first line continues into the second, which continues into the third one? They are all but one long sentence. Reading the poem aloud gives us the chance to notice that the rhythm changes when that happens. Instead of having a break after each line, we go on and on.</u>
Answer:
They are both displaced children. Marial is a young boy, the same age as Salva. The two meet during the march towards Ethiopia and they quickly become friends, mainly because they are the only children in the group. The try to maintain their optimism during the trip but unfortunately, Marial disappears suddenly during one night. The rest of the members in the camp theorize that the young boy was most likely killed by a lion.