Read this excerpt from Alfred, Lord Tennyson's "Crossing Bar."
"For though from out our bourne of Time and Place/The flood may bear me far,/I hope to see my Pilot face to face/When I have crost the bar."
Which mood does Tennyson evoke as he contemplates his death?
A.) delight
B.) grief
C.) optimism
D.) terror
Answer:
8.) C
Thank you
5 answers
I agree.
Anyone have the answers to the final?
Optimism
1. “Wee, sleekit, cow’rin, tim’rous beastie
2. “For he calls himself lamb…”
3. “Almost suspended, we are laid asleep/ in body, and become a living soul
4. “And on her dulcimer she played,/ singing of mount abora
5. “Bird thou never wert,/ that from heaven or near it…”
6. Metaphor
7. Epistolary
8. Optimism
9. Ominous
10. It is an example of sprung rhythm
11. “The sea is calm tonight.”
12. Fickle
13. “The…tide is loosed, and everywhere/ the ceremony in innocence is drowned
14. “North Richmond street, being blind, was a quiet street
15. “Now and again an Emily Brontë or a Robert Burns blazes out..”
16. It is an example of free verse
17. Pathos
18. “Feelings like this are the normal by-products of imperialism…”
19. It is an example of kinesthetic imagery
20. Dominion
21. Eloquent
22. Sheaves
23. Litanies
24. Poached
25. Him
26. Their
27. Whoever
28. Feline
29. Myself
30. Her
31. You
32. Was
33. Physics
34. Hasn’t
35. Who
36. Last week, we drove through Nebraska, Iowa, and South Dakota
37. Before they went on vacation, they made sure that the power was turned off
38. Be careful, David, or you’ll slip on the ice
39. Both of the cats’ collars have little bells on them
40. Some bright objects in the night sky are far-away suns; others are local planets
41. Here are some commonly used coins: pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters
42. The stand, remains Stephen King’s best-selling work
43. “A man may die…but an idea lives on.”
44. John Quincy Adams (1767-1848) was the sixth president of the United States
2. “For he calls himself lamb…”
3. “Almost suspended, we are laid asleep/ in body, and become a living soul
4. “And on her dulcimer she played,/ singing of mount abora
5. “Bird thou never wert,/ that from heaven or near it…”
6. Metaphor
7. Epistolary
8. Optimism
9. Ominous
10. It is an example of sprung rhythm
11. “The sea is calm tonight.”
12. Fickle
13. “The…tide is loosed, and everywhere/ the ceremony in innocence is drowned
14. “North Richmond street, being blind, was a quiet street
15. “Now and again an Emily Brontë or a Robert Burns blazes out..”
16. It is an example of free verse
17. Pathos
18. “Feelings like this are the normal by-products of imperialism…”
19. It is an example of kinesthetic imagery
20. Dominion
21. Eloquent
22. Sheaves
23. Litanies
24. Poached
25. Him
26. Their
27. Whoever
28. Feline
29. Myself
30. Her
31. You
32. Was
33. Physics
34. Hasn’t
35. Who
36. Last week, we drove through Nebraska, Iowa, and South Dakota
37. Before they went on vacation, they made sure that the power was turned off
38. Be careful, David, or you’ll slip on the ice
39. Both of the cats’ collars have little bells on them
40. Some bright objects in the night sky are far-away suns; others are local planets
41. Here are some commonly used coins: pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters
42. The stand, remains Stephen King’s best-selling work
43. “A man may die…but an idea lives on.”
44. John Quincy Adams (1767-1848) was the sixth president of the United States
Thank you for providing the answers to the questions.