The poem is about two people who have undergone a change in their relationship and as a result they are now tentative and cautious, like deer. presumably waiting for the relationship to end but are both unsure as to whether the other will act or not. I think
The full exerpt is: "Even now they are meat eaters; I think it is not in them to be farmers. My grandfather, Mammedaty, worked hard to make wheat and cotton grow on his land, but it came to very little in the end." The choices for what voice is used in this writing are A. Kiowa oral tradition B. historical commentary C. personal commentary of N. Scott Momaday D. Third person commentary The excerpt is the personal commentary of N. Scott Momaday.
syllables of sorrow
withered and died like grass
that test was as difficult as n obstacle
The personal voice-the voice of memoir
N. Scott Momaday is the son of writer Natachee Scott Momaday and painter Al Momaday. Al Momaday is of Kiowa descent. Natachee Scott Momaday is of English and Cherokee descent.
N. Scott Momaday was born on February 27, 1934.
N. Scott Momaday is an author of part Kiowa and part Cherokee descent.
N. Scott Momaday was born in 1934 (on February 27).
N. Scott Momaday is 77 years old (birthdate: February 27, 1934).
Author N. Scott Momaday was born at the Kiowa-Comanche Indian Hospital in Lawton, Oklahoma.
Natachee Scott Momaday was the name of N. Scott Momaday's grandmother.
N. Scott Momaday was born on February 27, 1934 in Lawton, Oklahoma.
Kiowa.
In order to see his grandmother's gravesite, N Scott Momaday as retold in The Way to Rainy Mountain, N Scott Momaday went to the rainy mountain region in Oklahoma.
In order to see his grandmother's gravesite, N Scott Momaday as retold in The Way to Rainy Mountain, N Scott Momaday went to the rainy mountain region in Oklahoma.
In order to see his grandmother's gravesite, N Scott Momaday as retold in The Way to Rainy Mountain, N Scott Momaday went to the rainy mountain region in Oklahoma.