Asked by wewe

n "Hope is the Thing with Feathers," how does Dickinson develop the speaker's
perspective?

Group of answer choices

By portraying hope as a quiet presence that hides in the soul, Dickinson shows that the speaker sees hope as fragile and uncertain.

By comparing hope to a bird that continues to sing through storms, Dickinson reveals the speaker's belief that hope is constant and endures even in hardship.

By describing hope as a song that fades in the wind, Dickinson suggests the speaker views hope as easily lost in adversity.

By depicting hope as a steady, selfless force that "never asks a crumb," Dickinson emphasizes the speaker's belief in hope's generosity and independence.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
By comparing hope to a bird that continues to sing through storms, Dickinson reveals the speaker's belief that hope is constant and endures even in hardship.