The Beginning and the End
Find the sentence that contains a Rhyme After every warsomeone has to clean up. Someone has to push the rubble Someone has to get mired splintered glass,and bloody rags. An example of repetition in poem? the word Someone The Line: Sleeves will go ragged The Line: broom in hand, The line: But already there are those nearby starting to mill about "Someone has to drag in a girder to prop up a wall" Here a girder most likely means:- iron a beam used as a main horizontal support in a building entrapped or entangled a loose mass of rock or masonry what does the “Rusted-out arguments” symbolize parallel structure s the sense of how much work has to be done The destruction of war. old ways of thinking The tone of the poem’s speaker is best described as — grateful and relieved—she’s happy to be alive resolute and enthusiastic—she’s ready to get on with the rebuilding angry and harsh—she’s bitter about what has happened ironic—she notices people’s tendency to forget about war A definition of the wordProverb A specific kind of verb A short saying that expresses a basic truth A long paragraph found in a fiction story A long poem Crisis means a difficult or unstable situation involving change Plural of the verb cry To carry out To accept change The light floods the room is an example of? Tone Diction Imagery Rhyme Why the author uses the word Someone instead of a specific name The author does not know anyone. The author tries to make war more universal The author is uninterested in other humans. In the last stanza, who is the person who must be stretched out / blade of grass in his mouth / gazing at the clouds? A soldier who has fought in the war Someone who is exhausted from rebuilding after the war A person who has forgotten about the war The child of someone who has died in the war