<span>If a poet wanted to draw upon a theme most
people are already familiar with, the poet would need to consider what is
universal among humanity. When we think about
what is common to people some possibilities are that we know that everyone is
born, everyone must eat, everyone must sleep, and everyone dies. With that in mind the poet might consider
drawing upon birth, hunger, sleep, or death.
</span>
<span>The elements of epic poetry that are shown in this excerpt are the following:
</span><span>a difficult journey with trials
rhyme and repetition of words
important historical events
a hero showing perseverance\
These are important in order for the story to have a feeling of excitement the readers to appreciate it.</span>
The correct answer of the given question above would be option B. In David Brown’s biography, “Nolan Bushnell,” the author uses the following quotes to describe Bushnell as a teenager: <span> “…he was one of the youngest ham radio operators in the country, and he did science experiments in his garage.” Hope this helps.</span>
I would think that this means that every one is effected differently or impacted in a different way.Here is an example some people are scared of the dark and think that there is evil within the dark and some people are like ehhh the lights are just off ope this helped :)
Quindlen links the conclusion to the introduction of her essay with the words "like many improbable ideas, when it works, it's a wonder", which is very close to her claim in the overall text, "America is an Improbable idea", it isn't supposed to work but it does despite all of the differences, specifically racial or ethnic, within it.