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“we grow accustomed to the dark” by emily dickin: abby hall we grow accustomed to the dark we grow accustomed to the dark — when light is put away — as when the neighbor holds the lamp to witness her goodbye — a moment — we uncertain step for newness of the night — then — fit our vision to the dark — and meet the road — erect — and so of larger — darknesses — those evenings of the brain — when not a moon disclose a sign — or star — come out — within — the bravest — grope a little — and sometimes hit a tree directly in the forehead — but as they learn to see — either the darkness alters — or something in the sight adjusts itself to midnight — and life steps almost straight. multiple-choice question based on the details in the poem, what other idea does the “darkness” most likely represent? night evil hardship death
In Emily Dickinson's "We grow accustomed to the Dark", the poem explores how people adapt to challenges. The "Darkness" metaphorically represents difficulties in life. "Night" is literal darkness, "Evil" is too negative/abstract, "Death" is final, but "Hardship" fits as the poem shows adjusting to life's struggles (like groping, learning to see in darkness as life steps straight), reflecting overcoming hardships.
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Hardship (the option corresponding to "Hardship", assuming the checkbox for Hardship is the correct choice here)