

What things is he cataloging He is cataloging all the services Chicago provides to the nation and to the world The following line from Sandburg's poem "Chicago" incorporates which poetic device Line 23-24: Fierce as a dog with tongue lapping for action, cunning/ (some) Simile Which passage below, from Sandburg's poem "Chicago," is an example of the poetic device of personification Lines 30-31: Under the smoke, dust all over his mouth, laughing with white teeth In Lines 1-3 of his poem "Chicago," Carl Sandburg uses the poetic device of cataloging or listing.

where sang the larks, shouting to the wooded hills, singing to the green valleys" indicate Lucinda's positive, happy outlook on life In lines 36-38 of his poem "Chicago," Sandburg tells us that the city brags and laughs becauseb Under his wrist is the pulse and under his ribs the heart of the people The following lines from Sandburg's poem "Chicago" incorporates which poetic device This technique was commonly used by Modernist writers Writing in first person in a stream-of-consciousness style Lucinda chastises the "degenerate sons and daughters" for their "sorrow, weariness, anger, discontent, and drooping hopes" - not because of what has happened to them in life, but because Of their attitudes about what has happened to them in life The descriptive words and phrases Lucinda Matlock used in Lines 15 and 17 such as "rambled. Line 18: Shouting to the wooded hills, singing to the green valleys Joyful The epitaph of "Lucinda Matlock" is written in what poetic form, popular to Modernist writersv A narrative poem - the poem form that tells a story Masters uses the technique of _ in this selection about Lucinda (Lines 1-4). What is the tone in the following passage from Lucinda Matlock's epitaph
