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In the poem the tropics in new york, in lines 6–8, where does the speaker envision the fruit to be? …of fruit-trees laden by low-singing rills, and dewy dawns, and mystical skies in benediction over nun-like hills. question 3 options:

User Kita
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1 Answer

4 votes
The speaker envisions the fruit will be on trees.
He says fruit-trees in this excerpt, which means that the fruit is found on trees, in their boughs. You other options are incorrect because there is no mention of a kitchen, a fair, or a church in the excerpt above, but there is mention of trees, which means it should be correct.
User Anil Bhomi
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