22. Which sentence describes a shift in the poem’s focus?
I know why, getting up in the cold dawn
you paint cold yellow houses
and silver trees. Look at those green birds,almost real,
and that lonely child looking
5 at those houses and trees.
You paint (the best way) without reasoning,
to see what you feel, and green birds
are what a child sees.

Some gifts are not given: you
10 are delivered to them,
bound by chains of nerves and genes
stronger than iron or steel, although
unseen. You have painted every day
for as long as I can remember
15 and will be painting still
when you read this, some cold
and distant December when the child
is old and the trees no longer silver
but black fingers scratching a grey sky.
A) In stanza 1, the speaker focuses on his daughter’s creative struggles, while in stanza 2, he imagines her eventual success as an artist.
B) In stanza 1, the speaker focuses on his daughter’s paintings, while in stanza 2, he describes his own artwork.
C) In stanza 1, the speaker focuses on his daughter’s art as an expression of childhood, while in stanza 2, he considers her future as a mature artist.
D) In stanza 1, the speaker focuses on his daughter’s early artistic success, while in stanza 2, he questions whether she should pursue a career as a painter.

Respuesta :

Answer:

C) In stanza 1, the speaker focuses on his daughter's art as an expression of childhood, while in stanza 2, he considers her future as a mature artist

(this is my last question that I'll be answering)