Asked by Unmei

A theological argument offered by Donne in "Death Be Not Proud" may be summarized as?
A. chance and fate rule all.
B. life is illusion
C. death cannot be overcome
D. the human essence is immortal.

I think it's C.

Answers

Answered by Writeacher
John Donne was a cleric in the English church. C is definitely not the answer!

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Donne
Answered by Ms. Sue
I disagree.

http://www.gradesaver.com/donne-poems/study-guide/section7/
Answered by Unmei
well I know it's not B cause the first time I took the test I got it wrong.
Answered by Writeacher
He was Christian. What do Christians believe?
Answered by Ms. Sue
Is that a guess, or is it based on Writeacher's question and our links?
Answered by Unmei
well I thought that Christians believe that human essence (their soul) is immortal.
Answered by Ms. Sue
You're right. D is the right answer.
Answered by Unmei
in "Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night," Dylan Thomas's phrase "wild men" describes
A. people who embrace death
B. people who deny death
C. those who trade dignity
D. those who celebrate life

I think it's D. I already answered B the first time and got it wrong.
Answered by Ms. Sue
I agree.
Answered by Unmei
The theme of Sandburg's poem "Grass is
A. forgetfulness
B. war
C. peace
D. freedom

I think it's D. I answered B the first time and got it wrong.
Answered by Writeacher
I agree with you on D.
Answered by Ms. Sue
It's not D.

Please study this site before you post again.

http://sites.google.com/a/rbvhs-hirmas.com/carl-sandburg/Home/grass-analyzation
Answered by Writeacher
Sorry ... the D I agreed with you about was the answer for Dylan Thomas's poem, not Carl Sandburg's.
Answered by Unmei
is it forgetfulness?
Answered by Ms. Sue
Yes.
Answered by Unmei
Beyond tone a poet's attitude toward his or her subject reveals to us a poem's?
A. theme
B. subject
C. diction
D. structure
Answered by Unmei
I think it's A
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