The imagery of "the heart" suggests that the relationship between the society the narrator plans to build and the outside world will be the following: membership for the new society on the mountain will be open to anyone.
In chapter twelve of Anthem, which is the chapter from which the excerpt was extracted, Equality 7-2521 and the Golden One decide that they will launch a new race in the abandoned house they found from the Unmentionable Times. This new race that they vow to create will accept individualism, and they intend to make it the heart of the earth, i.e., <em>the central piece of the planet, </em>the core that will keep life flowing for humanity (much like a heart keeps the body alive by pumping blood). A humanity that believes in individualism, the word "I", and the supremacy of the ego.
Answer:
Explanation:
Jane learns exactly what NOT to do in any teaching situation. She sees how cruel her teachers were, and how they killed Helen, Jane's best friend, by refusing to feed her as punishment. This is something Jane does not forget, and she goes on to be a much better teacher. She cares for her students, and she cares about what they learn. She does not subject them to horrible, unfair punishments. She feeds her students, and she diciplines them in a fair and reasonable ways. Jane eventually realizes that her experiences as a young girl at Lowood helped her to become the wonderful teacher she was.
I don't think that your options match your tiles - you must have copied them wrong. I can only match iambic pentameter with D. each foot consists of one unstressed followed by a stressed syllable.
However, enjambment has nothing to do with the stress in syllables, but rather with the fact that some poets like to continue a sentence in a poem into the next line, without the use of commas or other pauses. Blank verse is a type of a verse that doesn't have a rhyme, and is made up of iambic pentameters.
Each of the singers in the boys' choir must practice his part.
When the balloon burst,the baby cried.