A narrow fellow in the grass -Occasionally rides;You may have met him did you not?His notice sudden is.The grass divides as with a comb,A spotted shaft is seen,And then it closes at your feet -And opens further on.He likes a boggy acre,A floor too cool for corn,Yet when a boy, and barefoot,I more than once at noon -Have passed, I thought, a whip-lashUnbraiding in the sun,When, stooping to secure it,It wrinkled, and was gone.Several of natures people -I know and they know me;I feel for them a transport -Of cordiality;But never met this fellow,Attended or alone,Without a tighter breathing -And zero at the bone.On the basis of above poem please answer the following questionWho or what is the "fellow" in this poem?
A narrow fellow in the grass -Occasionally rides;You may have met him did you not?His notice sudden is.The grass divides as with a comb,A spotted shaft is seen,And then it closes at your feet -And opens further on.He likes a boggy acre,A floor too cool for corn,Yet when a boy, and barefoot,I more than once at noon -Have passed, I thought, a whip-lashUnbraiding in the sun,When, stooping to secure it,It wrinkled, and was gone.Several of natures people -I know and they know me;I feel for them a transport -Of cordiality;But never met this fellow,Attended or alone,Without a tighter breathing -And zero at the bone.On the basis of above poem please answer the following questionThe phrase "Without a tighter breathing / And zero at the bone" most nearly indicates
A narrow fellow in the grass -Occasionally rides;You may have met himdid you not?His notice sudden is.The grass divides as with a comb,A spotted shaft is seen,And then it closes at your feet -And opens further on.He likes a boggy acre,A floor too cool for corn,Yet when a boy, and barefoot,I more than once at noon -Have passed, I thought, a whip-lashUnbraiding in the sun,When, stooping to secure it,It wrinkled, and was gone.Several of natures people -I know and they know me;I feel for them a transport -Of cordiality;But never met this fellow,Attended or alone,Without a tighter breathing -And zero at the bone.On the basis of above poem please answer the following questionThe phrase "nature’s people" means
A narrow fellow in the grass -Occasionally rides;You may have met himdid you not?His notice sudden is.The grass divides as with a comb,A spotted shaft is seen,And then it closes at your feet -And opens further on.He likes a boggy acre,A floor too cool for corn,Yet when a boy, and barefoot,I more than once at noon -Have passed, I thought, a whip-lashUnbraiding in the sun,When, stooping to secure it,It wrinkled, and was gone.Several of natures people -I know and they know me;I feel for them a transport -Of cordiality;But never met this fellow,Attended or alone,Without a tighter breathing -And zero at the bone.On the basis of above poem please answer the following questionThe speaker of this poem is most likely
By using tiny probes as neural prostheses, scientists may be able to restore nerve function in quadriplegics and make the blind see or the deaf hear. Thanks to advanced techniques, a single, small, implanted probe can stimulate individual neurons electrically or chemically and then record responses. Preliminary results suggest that the microprobe telemetry systems can be permanently implanted and replace damaged or missing nerves. The tissue-compatible microprobes represent an advance over the typical aluminum wire electrodes used in studies of the cortex and other brain structures. Researchers accumulate much data using traditional electrodes, but there is a question of how much damage they cause to the nervous system. Microprobes, which are about as thin as a human hair, cause minimal damage and disruption of neurons when inserted into the brain. In addition to recording nervous system impulses, the microprobes have minuscule channels that open the way for delivery of drugs, cellular growth factors, neurotransmitters, and other neuroactive compounds to a single neuron or to groups of neurons. Also, patients who lack certain biochemicals could receive doses via prostheses. The probes can have up to four channels, each with its own recording/stimulating electrode.On the basis of above passage please answer the following questionOne similar feature of microprobes and wire electrodes is
By using tiny probes as neural prostheses, scientists may be able to restore nerve function in quadriplegics and make the blind see or the deaf hear. Thanks to advanced techniques, a single, small, implanted probe can stimulate individual neurons electrically or chemically and then record responses. Preliminary results suggest that the microprobe telemetry systems can be permanently implanted and replace damaged or missing nerves. The tissue-compatible microprobes represent an advance over the typical aluminum wire electrodes used in studies of the cortex and other brain structures. Researchers accumulate much data using traditional electrodes, but there is a question of how much damage they cause to the nervous system. Microprobes, which are about as thin as a human hair, cause minimal damage and disruption of neurons when inserted into the brain. In addition to recording nervous system impulses, the microprobes have minuscule channels that open the way for delivery of drugs, cellular growth factors, neurotransmitters, and other neuroactive compounds to a single neuron or to groups of neurons. Also, patients who lack certain biochemicals could receive doses via prostheses. The probes can have up to four channels, each with its own recording/stimulating electrode.On the basis of above passage please answer the following questionWhich of the following best expresses the main idea of the passage?