He's looking at the fire like a newborn baby looks at the world; very curious of what it is and how it happened.
The answer is: Do not make my love look older.
In Shakespeare's "Sonnet 19," he addresses time and begs it not to grow lines in his love's face. He allows time to execute detructive acts, but he refuses to let it perform the most atrocious act - to make his love look older. He claims that youthfulness must remain unaffected by the progress of time.
In the poem "the love song of J.Alfred Prufrock" T.S Elliot uses an urban setting and expresses in his style an experimental nature. Descriptions like the city is full of "yellow smoke that rubs its muzzle on the window-panes" and "It lingers on pools of water in the streets and is covered in soot that falls from chimneys. There descriptions make part of the modernism since modernism usually rejects romanticism and therefore the nature as a setting
The correct answer is “They give the sense that nature has taken over a once-urban area”. Taken from the short story “<em>By the Waters of Babylon</em>” by Stephen Vincent Benét (1937), the passage presented above narrates the moment when John, the son of a priest, visits <u>the Place of the Gods</u>. The Place of the Gods or The Dead Place was a great city that was destroyed by a great burning and it was said to be inhabited with spirits and demons since then. Since the passage describes this desolate place, the writer used a suspense tone in the narration. It is said to be desolate because the state of the place is completely empty, and <u>nature has taken over the place</u>. In fact, the words “<em>stone or metal,</em>” “<em>many pigeons,</em>” “<em>towers,</em>” and "<em>wild cats that roam the god-roads</em>” describe the details of a desolate place that has been taken over by nature, which is <u>the Place of the Gods</u>.
Answer:
The answer is A
“‘Any of us can move across it... I argue that we all have the capacity for love and evil — to be Mother Theresa, to be Hitler or Saddam Hussein.’” ( Paragraph 3
Explanation: