<span>#1) How do Niemöller's words in "First they came for..." repeat the theme developed in "I Sit and Look Out" by Walt Whitman?
Answer: After carefully reading both of the excerpts that are presented above I believe that the words of Niemoller in “First they came for…” repeat the theme developed in “I Sit and Look Out” by Walt Whitman conveying his own view on how even the person who just remains silent while also seeing the injustice that is happening right in front of him can be the most cruel of all. He makes it clear when at the end of the poem-- “Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me.”
<span>I hope it helps, Regards. </span></span>
I would say it B because it makes the most sense because he has been doing really well in class and emboldened would mean so that he would have confidence in what he is going to say in Paris
Answer:
1) Mixed Metaphors & Implied Metaphors
2) I put wings and rise, which wasn't correct, but the explanation reads "These two words suggest that the "I" in the poem is bird that is kept captive, metaphorically speaking."
3) A, he repears a single specific word again and again
4) A, he saw her from the bottom of the stairs/before she saw him. She was starting down,
Explanation:
Odysseus told Penelope that because when Telemachus was able to grow facial hair it meant that he was becoming a man and that many years had passed, meaning he probably was dead. As for the disguise part, I suppose it was because beards cover a large portion of the face and make you look tougher, more masculine, and gruff.<span />