Bryant uses images of coffins, tombs, and graves to develop the idea of death. The poet paints a scary picture of death using words such as agony, shroud, and shudder:
Of the stern agony, and shroud, and pall.
And breathless darkness, and the narrow house,
Make thee to shudder, and grow sick at heart—
He describes the "stern agony" of dying and uses words such as shroud and pall to suggest the cloth wrapped around dead bodies and caskets. Bryant also draws comparisons between the freedom and space of nature and the narrow confinement of coffins.
He further explains how nature acts as a "great tomb of man" as everyone gets mixed up in the earth after dying.
Credited directly from Plato
The death of a loved one is a disaster that nature cannot heal.
Answer: A
Explanation
Nature will not heal that wound that is left after losing a loved one.
Even though nature creates fascinating patterns, it will not close the wound left.
However, time will be the determinant of the healing process.
This is because the effect of losing someone is eternal, and it is time that will heal the wounds.
Ultimately, nature will only create shorter healing, but once the one forgets about life, the injuries will be still fresh.
Therefore nature does not repair everything.
The flower if drank, made those not want to go home to their families, but they want to. The flower makes them do things they dont want to, this is like alcohol or drugs. People take them and they may do things they dont want to, they have to control.
I hope this helped. Have a nice day, make sure to take care of yourself. You're loved <3
Answer:
Probably A or B.
Explanation:
"Other countries with such divisions have in fact divided into new nations...but not this one, impossibly interwoven even in its hostilities." The passage does say America is still together despite the decisions, which makes me believe option B is correct. However, A also could be correct because the main idea of the passage largely is the differences between religion, sexuality, and race in America where "What is the point of a nation in which...speak in theory of hatred, one for the other? What is the point of a nation in which one part always seems to be on the verge of fisticuffs with another?"