Please answer these poetry question and essay

There is more then one answer for the multiple choice question:

  1. Read the poem which follows and select the emotions and imagery of a parent’s perspective on a child’s death that also appear in The Sweet Hereafter.
    “Luna Rayne” by Susan Michalski

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    I hold this tiny thought
    in my fist
    if my moon girl
    could
    she’d dance
    through the storm puddles
    left behind
    in my next dream
    and sing like rain
    on canvas
    for one brilliant moment
    as I recall


    The lonely image of the moon
    The feeling of anger like a fist
    The feeling of being in a dream

    The feeling of living in memories

    The feeling of joy one has when dancing

3 points

QUESTION 2

  1. Read the poem which follows and select the emotions and imagery of an outsider’s perspective of death that also appear in The Sweet Hereafter.
    “There’s been a Death, in the Opposite House” by Emily Dickinson

    There’s been a Death, in the Opposite House,
    As lately as Today —
    I know it, by the numb look
    Such Houses have — always —

    The Neighbors rustle in and out —
    The Doctor — drives away —
    A Window opens like a Pod —
    Abrupt — mechanically —

    Somebody flings a Mattress out —
    The Children hurry by —
    They wonder if it died — on that —
    I used to — when a Boy —

    The Minister — goes stiffly in —
    As if the House were His —
    And He owned all the Mourners — now —
    And little Boys — besides —

    And then the Milliner — and the Man
    Of the Appalling Trade —
    To take the measure of the House —
    There’ll be that Dark Parade —

    Of Tassels — and of Coaches — soon —
    It’s easy as a Sign —
    The Intuition of the News —
    In just a Country Town —


    The image of the undertaker

    The numbness of the bereaved

    The curiosity of the children
    The image of the casket and the procession

    Survivors looking to the church for comfort

3 points

QUESTION 3

  1. Read the poem which follows and select the emotions and imagery of an outsider’s perspective of death that also appear in The Sweet Hereafter.
    “Every Death Is Magic from the Enemy to Be Avenged” by Brooks Haxton

    When fever burned the last light out of my daughter’s eyes,
    I swore to find and kill the ones to blame. Men
    must mount the long boat in the dark with spears.
    At dawn, where the flowering spicebush hid my scent,
    I crouched. A young wife, newborn slung across her chest,
    came first for spring water. She stooped. My god,
    for vengeance, spoke her secret name inside my ear. Her god
    stepped back with no scream, his right hand at his mouth,
    the knuckles clenched between the pointed teeth.

    The idea of secrets being told

    The idea of assigning blame

    The image of the flowering bush

    The image of the pointy teeth

    The image of the newborn

3 points

QUESTION 4

  1. Read the poem which follows and select the symbols and imagery of death that also appear in The Sweet Hereafter.
    “Absence” by Amy Lowell

    My cup is empty to-night,
    Cold and dry are its sides,
    Chilled by the wind from the open window.
    Empty and void, it sparkles white in the moonlight.
    The room is filled with the strange scent
    Of wisteria blossoms.
    They sway in the moon’s radiance
    And tap against the wall.
    But the cup of my heart is still,
    And cold, and empty.
    When you come, it brims
    Red and trembling with blood,
    Heart’s blood for your drinking;
    To fill your mouth with love
    And the bitter-sweet taste of a soul.


    The cold
    The darkness

    The moonlight
    The sweetness

    The empty cup

3 points

QUESTION 5

  1. In The Sweet Hereafter and the following poem, what does the newborn symbolize?
    “Every Death Is Magic from the Enemy to Be Avenged” by Brooks HaxtonWhen fever burned the last light out of my daughter’s eyes,
    I swore to find and kill the ones to blame. Men
    must mount the long boat in the dark with spears.
    At dawn, where the flowering spicebush hid my scent,
    I crouched. A young wife, newborn slung across her chest,
    came first for spring water. She stooped. My god,
    for vengeance, spoke her secret name inside my ear. Her god
    stepped back with no scream, his right hand at his mouth,
    the knuckles clenched between the pointed teeth.

3 points

QUESTION 6

  1. In section four, which of the following is the extended metaphor for Nichole’s mental state.

3 points

QUESTION 7

  1. In The Sweet Hereafter, why is the accident scene described only in similes – “bearing down on me like a wall of water” – and surreal images – “the sky tipped and veered away and the ground lurched brutally forward?”

3 points

QUESTION 8

  1. In section 5 of The Sweet Hereafter, what is the central symbol for Dolores Driscoll and her outcome?

3 points

QUESTION 9

  1. Match each kind of figurative language from a poem with the same kind of figurative language from the novel The Sweet Hereafter.
    Read Answer Items for Question 9
    Read Answer Items for Question 9
    Read Answer Items for Question 9
    Answer

    A. “A piercing Comfort it affords/In passing Calvary – / To note the fashions – of the Cross – “
    B. “At the word, the saw,/As if to prove saws knew what supper meant,/Leaped out at the boy’s hand”
    C. “A Window opens like a Pod”

6 points

QUESTION 10

  1. In three or four paragraphs, compare and contrast the irony of Nichole’s reasons for lying to the court about the accident to another well-known character who lies that you have encountered in literature. Which of these characters had a better reason to lie: your character or Nichole? Which of these characters got the outcome they hoped for when they told the lie? What does the irony in each story say about the nature of truth and lies? (Note: some famous literary liars you might consider writing about are: Elizabeth Proctor or Abigail Williams from The Crucible; Odysseus from The Odyssey; Romeo from Romeo and Juliet; Tom or Daisy Buchanan from The Great Gatsby; Arthur Dimmesdale from the Scarlet Letter; the narrator or Marla Singer from Fight Club; Cyrano or Christian from Cyrano de Bergerac; Sheherazhad from Arabian Nights; Huck Finn from The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn; Pip from Great Expectations, or a liar of your choice from a book or play you have read/seen)
 
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