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from \o captain! my captain!\ by walt whitman
9 o captain! my captain! rise up and hear the bells;
10 rise up - for you the flag is flung - for you the bugle trills,
11 for you bouquets and ribbond wreaths - for you the shores a - crowdin
12 for you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;
13 here captain! dear father!
14 this arm beneath your head!
15 it is some dream that on the deck,
16 youve fallen cold and dead.
- the metaphor in line 13 shows that—
□ a. the captain and the speaker are related.
□ b. lincoln left behind several children.
□ c. lincoln guided americans like a parent.
□ d. the speaker turns to his own father for comfort.
- the figurative language in lines 14–15 shows that—
□ a. the speaker wishes the captains death were not real.
□ b. the speaker hopes that he will wake up from a dream.
□ c. the captain is actually sleeping and not dead at all.
□ d. the captain died in his sleep at the end of the journey.
- For question 1: "O Captain! My Captain!" is an elegy for Abraham Lincoln, where the "captain" is a metaphor for Lincoln. Line 13's "dear father" extends this metaphor, framing Lincoln as a guiding, paternal figure for the American people, not a literal family member.
- For question 2: Lines 14-15 express the speaker's shock and grief, clinging to the idea that the captain's death is just a dream, showing they wish the death was not real.
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- C. Lincoln guided Americans like a parent.
- A. the speaker wishes the captain's death were not real.