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Task 1: EFFECTIVE OR NOT Complete the table below to make sense of how effective or ineffective the treatment is of the underlying or overarching issue concerning human experience using the lines from the poem "God's Grandeur". Use a separate sheet of paper for this task. Effective Reasons Ineffective Reasons Lines from the Poem​

Task 1 EFFECTIVE OR NOT Complete The Table Below To Make Sense Of How Effective Or Ineffective The Treatment Is Of The Underlying Or Overarching Issue Concernin class=

Sagot :

Answer:

Hope this will help you!

Explanation:

Line 1

THE world is charged with the grandeur of God.

"The world," according to the poem’s speaker, is energized with God’s energy and beauty.

"The world," according to the poem’s speaker, is energized with God’s energy and beauty.Sort of the way the batteries for our cell phones and computers and music playing devices are charged with electricity.

Line 2

It will flame out, like shining from shook foil;

Line two is a fairly complicated simile. The speaker is saying that the charged world is temporary. One day the lights will go out, similar to the way the light appears and then goes out of "foil" when you shake it.

Lines 3

It gathers to a greatness, like the ooze of oil

It gathers to a greatness, like the ooze of oilCrushed.

This simile is a little hard to wrap the mind around. As in line two, the first clause is abstract (greatness is an abstract idea), and the second clause provides a concrete image (oil is something concrete, something we can picture).

Line 4

"Why do men then, now not wreck his rod?"

When we arrive at this line we see the poem is talking about "men."

Up until the 20th century, the word "man" meant "people," both men and women. Of course, it also still meant male people as different from female people. In looking back on pre-20th century literature, it’s often hard to tell which sense of "man" or "men" was meant.