Note: the translation of your poem may vary, so check the word choices before answering.
In the first stanza, the personification of hatred creates an image of a predator, a creature able to "vault" obstacles. Words like "vault," "pounce" and "track" add to this image. (Your translation might have "regards," "leaps," and "overtakes" -- but the idea is the same).
Personification is used later in the poem to contrast hatred with compassion, brotherhood, and doubt. Hatred, she writes "never tires" of being an executioner. Furthermore, it's "always ready," even if it must wait. In this way, he can wait for compassion and brotherhood to give way to violence.
Brotherhood, compassion (or empathy, depending on the translation) and doubt, she says, are "sluggish" and do not compel people to act in the way hatred does.
Answer: D. The Battle of Gettysburg was a three-day conflict in which Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia faced off against George Meade's Army of the Potomac. Instead of fighting defensively, which had won Lee many victories, the Confederates made a disastrous charge against the Union center.
Explanation:
The best option is D as it corrects errors in spelling and grammar.
It corrected the ''one Lee...'' to ''won Lee...''.
It corrected the use of a lower case for Meade to an uppercase which is correct as Meade is the name of a person and so as a proper noun should always have its first letter capitalized.
It corrected the use of an upper case for ''Disastrous charge...'' to the lower case ''disastrous charge...'' which is correct because disastrous is not a noun in this instance.
Uh no pls don’t use this amazing app to self promote