Answer: The Heart of a Woman, by Georgia Douglas Johnson (1918)
Explanation:
Along with other Harlem Renaissance poets, like Langston Hughes and Claude McKay, Georgia Douglas Johnson showed that longing for freedom is a key element of their identity. In the poem "The Heart of a Woman", Georgia reflects the experience of being an African American woman, and the pain that experience brings. Women enter "some alien cage in its plight, And tries to forget it has dreamed of the stars", she writes, reflecting the subjugation that her community, especially women, experienced.
They can expect the falling action or the aftermath of the climax which leads to the resolution.
D is the answer to this question
It seems that you have missed the necessary options for us to answer this question, so I had to look for it. Anyway, here is the answer. The setting that would best <span>develop the theme in a play whose tragic hero's weakness is a lack of respect for authority would be a circus. Hope this helps.</span>
Answer: As you read the titles, you see how they both can contribute to main idea of "life" both provide a thought as to what life could be. "The road not taken" by Robert Frost is titled accordingly. The title tells us just what was not done, as if the tone is regretful at first, as if to indicate what was not accomplished with in life. "The seven ages of men" by William Shakespeare tells us how man can go through many things within life. In Shakespeare's title, he is showing how life can be seen through 7 ages or periods, as if to say we have a fate to experience. Given to us in 7 ways, each becoming a unique yet key point in our lives. In Frost's title, it is portrayed that life has choices and we must choose wisely or we will look back to the road we have not taken.
Explanation: Best i got hope ya like it, i'm a huge poetry fan