D. He feels disgusted by the wasteful nature of war.
It can determined that Grendel feels disgusted by the wasteful nature of war by how he says he was sickened by how so much was killed—“cows, horses, men”—and how he felt the killing was wasteful because all of the killed was “left to rot or burn.” Thus, it is by the wasteful nature of war that he is disgusted.
Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman may have differences in their poetry writing styles; points of view and structure. A good example of it, it’s how Dickenson tends to write longer pieces related to his own life experience, While Whitman contextualized his poetry to his historical context. Nevertheless and undoubtedly both authors share the same recurrence on talking about death in their poems. Each author relates death and how it's related to human beings. For instance, both wrote poems based on the civil war. While Dickenson analyzed death from a more religious point of view, seeing the transcendence of life and good behavior, Whitman relates it to a more human-centered view –e.g. the mother’s poem- where he captivates with seeing the beauty even in the most painful situations. In brief, both apply this Transcendentalism and influence American literature on appreciating life and human beings.
A.
symbol
B.
rose
C.
sometimes
D.
happiness
B. The subject is unnecessary in interrogative sentences.
C. The subject has to be placed before the verb.
D. The subject of the sentence is always paired with a helping verb