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What thoughts I have of you tonight, Walt
Whitman, for I walked down the sidestreets
under the trees with a headache self-
conscious looking at the full moon.

 In my hungry fatigue, and shopping for
images, I went into the neon fruit
supermarket, dreaming of your
enumerations!

—“A Supermarket in California,”
Allen Ginsberg

Which of these statements about the lengths of the lines in this poem is true?


A.) The lines are all equal in length.

B.) The lines are visually similar.

C.) The lines break only at the end punctuation.

Answer :

jenniebecky

Answer:

The lines break only at the end punctuation. I found it by the hard way

Explanation:

The correct option is C.

What does the supermarket represent in A Supermarket in California?

A Supermarket in California can be seen as part of the counter-culture of the Beat Generation. Ginsberg clearly draws a line between him and the people living in suburban America with their “blue automobiles.”

Why is the poem named A Supermarket in California?

But with "A Supermarket in California," Ginsberg insists in his title that location is important, and it seems to us that there's nothing more American than a neon supermarket in California, filled with mothers, babies, and canned soup. This is not just a poem about Walt Whitman, Ginsberg, or even a supermarket.

Learn more about A Supermarket in California here https://brainly.com/question/26655013

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