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In line 18-19 of "Theme for English B" "hear you, hear me" most likely refers to:

A the speaker's instructor and himself
B the speaker's ancestors
C the students
D the people who live in Harlem

Answer :

Answer:

I am pretty sure it is a, but if it's wrong try c. good luck.

In the lines 18-19, the "hear you, hear me" in "Theme for English B" most probably confers to:

A). The speaker's instructor and himself.

  • The reference that the poet makes in the lines stating "hear you, hear me" would be the speaker('you') and himself('me').
  • The key idea that the poem lay emphasis upon is race, recognition, and the attachment.
  • The poet explores the complications that arises due to the question of recognition and identity for the people discriminated through race.

Thus, option A is the correct answer.

Learn more about "Theme" here:

brainly.com/question/10757573

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