It is a tradition for chinas japanese and korea for about a tousands years hope i helped i am barely geeting the hang of this..
Sonnet 43 uses both repetition and variety to intensify meaning.
There are several lines that begin "I love thee..." While these lines begin in the same way (repetition), the rest of the line varies.
For example, I love thee freely...I love the purely...etc. In these lines, EBB is able to discuss the many dimensions of her deep love. Her love has many sides to it, as the repetition and variety explain.
The correct answer is B.
Based on the style and language that Ginsberg uses in "Homework," he would most likely agree that the writing of this poem is an attempt at imitating his favorite American poet, Walt Whitman.
Like Whitman's poems, this poem uses long lines. Furthermore, the language is conversational, also like Whitman's poems.
While the poem does protest the current state of the world, the style and language is a reflection of Whitman's influence on Ginsberg.
amazing, lovely, superb, adequate, superlative
poor, inferior, atrocious, dreadful, inadequate