Makes the reader wonder what "doesn't love a wall."
Answer: Option 1.
<u>Explanation:</u>
This line has been taken from the poem "Mending wall". In the line The fact that the speaker does not specify what, precisely, is the "Something" that "sends the frozen-ground-swell" under the fence could mean that the word something refers to nature, as another educator suggested, or even God. The word "sends" in line two implies that the sender has a will, a conscious purpose, so it seems logical to consider the possibility we should attribute such a sending to a higher being.
Further, in the lines which follow the first two, this "Something" also "spills" the big rocks from the top of the fence out into the sun and "makes gaps" in the fence where two grown men can walk through, side by side (lines 3, 4). These verbs are also active, like "sends," and imply reason and purpose to the one who performs the actions. Therefore, it is plausible that the "Something" which sends "the frozen-ground-swell"—freezing the water in the ground so that the ground literally swells and bursts the fence with the movement—"spills boulders," and "makes gaps" refers to God.
Hi FallDownGuys,
Your Question:
Read the excerpt from Act III, scene iii of Romeo and Juliet. Friar Laurence: Romeo, come forth; come forth, thou fearful man: Affliction is enamour’d of thy parts, And thou art wedded to calamity. What is the meaning of the phrase "thou art wedded to calamity”? You have not had enough disaster in your life. You often have disaster around you. Your marriage will be a complete disaster. Your confusion is the cause of many disasters
Answer:
Your marriage will be a complete disaster.
The reason its the answer i choose because it states in the sentence "thouh art wedded" which means they got married and the fact that it says calamity at the end states the marriage wont last due to the disasters that will happen between them.
Calamity - "an event causing great and often sudden damage or distress; a disaster."
Wedded - getting married
So Ed but I love you very much stop cheating and actually try from your math teacher .
Gilman expresses her feelings about the role women had in society at the time using the literary form of allegory. Allegorizing her own challenges, she demonstrates how she chose art [writing] over difficult experiences with women.
Gilman conveys the woman's mental state through a variety of literary strategies. Personification, imagery, and similes are a few of these. Additionally, she employs terms with unfavorable meanings like fungus, destroy, and lurid. Gilman refers to the wallpaper most frequently in figurative language.
The wallpaper unmistakably stands in for the narrator's imprisoning structures of family, medicine, and tradition. Wallpaper is a lowly and domestic material, and Gilman deftly employs this nightmare-inducing paper as a representation of the household existence that ensnares so many women.
To learn more on Gilman
brainly.com/question/11614430
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