ReaRea12
Answered

At Westonci.ca, we provide reliable answers to your questions from a community of experts. Start exploring today! Get expert answers to your questions quickly and accurately from our dedicated community of professionals. Get detailed and accurate answers to your questions from a dedicated community of experts on our Q&A platform.

In the first six lines of "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning," the speaker compares parting to
a.
dying.
c.
sorrowing.
b.
breathing.
d.
dissolving.


Sagot :

Answer: a.  dying.

Explanation:

In the first six lines of this poem by John Donne, the speaker is talking to his lover. He likens their separation to that of virtuous men dying and remarks on how they do not make a show of it but rather accept it.

He believes that they should behave in the same way as they part ways with each other with neither noise nor too much crying which he believes would desecrate the dignity of their love.

Answer:

a

Explanation: