Which of the following lines from the poem best supports the correct answer to the previous question.

Responses

“How are yu? I ahm fine. How are yu?”
“How are yu? I ahm fine. How are yu?”

“I carve my crooked name, and again at night/ until my hand and arm are sore,/ I carve my crooked name,/ my name.”
“I carve my crooked name, and again at night/ until my hand and arm are sore,/ I carve my crooked name,/ my name.”

“My teacher bends over me, gently squeezes/ my shoulders, the squeeze I give my sons.”
“My teacher bends over me, gently squeezes/ my shoulders, the squeeze I give my sons.”

“Straight as a nun I sit./ My fingers foolish before paper and pen.”

1 answer

To best support the correct answer to the previous question, the line that most likely resonates with themes of identity, struggle, or personal expression would be:

“I carve my crooked name, and again at night/ until my hand and arm are sore,/ I carve my crooked name,/ my name.”

This line suggests a deep, perhaps painful, engagement with the speaker's identity, reflecting the persistence and effort involved in asserting oneself, which can be a central theme in poetry about personal experience.

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