Question
Which phrases representing the idea of freedom connect the poem to the autobiography?
“Leaps on the back of the wind” connects to “ran down the hill.”
“And floats downstream” connects to “and into the road.”
“Dips his wing in the orange sun” connects to “the good sense.”
“And dares to claim the sky” connects to “to stop running.”
“Leaps on the back of the wind” connects to “ran down the hill.”
“And floats downstream” connects to “and into the road.”
“Dips his wing in the orange sun” connects to “the good sense.”
“And dares to claim the sky” connects to “to stop running.”
Answers
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
The first two pairs.
- “Leaps on the back of the wind” ↔ “ran down the hill” — both show unrestrained, joyful movement and escape.
- “And floats downstream” ↔ “and into the road” — both suggest being carried forward, effortless motion toward open space.
The other two pairs don’t match the freedom theme as clearly: “dips his wing in the orange sun” doesn’t align with “the good sense,” and “dares to claim the sky” doesn’t correspond to “to stop running.”
- “Leaps on the back of the wind” ↔ “ran down the hill” — both show unrestrained, joyful movement and escape.
- “And floats downstream” ↔ “and into the road” — both suggest being carried forward, effortless motion toward open space.
The other two pairs don’t match the freedom theme as clearly: “dips his wing in the orange sun” doesn’t align with “the good sense,” and “dares to claim the sky” doesn’t correspond to “to stop running.”
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