The question above, you want to assess your ability to interpret a text. For that reason, I can't write an answer for you, but I'll show you how to write one.
First, you must read the poem the question refers to. With this reading, it will be possible for you to understand the elements that your question requires you to identify.
These elements can be identified as follows:
- The theme of the poem refers to the message the poem wants to convey.
- The poem has rhymes, show how they add musicality to the poem and how important this is to bring out parts of the message.
- The poem presents imagery, which is the stimulation of the reader's five senses, through words that stimulate those senses. Show how imagery is used and its impact on the poem.
- The poem presents metaphors, which are implicit comparisons, which increase the meaning of the elements. Show where these metaphors are, their meaning, and their importance to the poem.
- Introduce the historical context of the poem by researching the author, his life, and the time when the poem was written. Show how significant all this was.
You can search for articles that analyze this poem and help you understand it.
More information:
brainly.com/question/21646250?referrer=searchResults
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Number 2 is the answer because Puerto Ricans call the furnace a forgon.
The animals were able to take over the farm because no one truly carried to do anything
Answer:
In "A Native of Winby," time has changed Laneway's childhood home. He finds that the house is no longer standing. So Option D is the correct answer.
Explanation:
In Sarah Orne Jewett's "A Native of Winby," Senator Joseph K. Laneway, after fifty years, visited Winby, the New England town where he was born and where he lived for thirteen years before his family moved to the west. Laneway became a successful businessman, a Civil War general, and a leading United States senator. On visiting Winby, he was surprised and pleased to know that no one recognized him. His anonymity allowed him to make three quiet pilgrimages before the public came to know about him. One of the pilgrimages was a trip to his childhood home where he spent many years. He found his house in ruins and also the remnants of the rose bush his mother missed in the West. This evoked memories that made him linger at the spot for a long time.