Does anyone anywhere really know?
Write the answer in a few sentences.
1. What are the questions being asked in the first stanza of the poem?
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ok , first tell me where is the stanza .
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The poem actually consists of just one stanza, comprising twenty lines. The first line of the poem—"Remember, no men are strange, no countries foreign"—conveys its disarmingly simple message: beneath the surface, we're all the same. The human race may be divided up into different genders, religions, nationalities, and so on, but it's still just one race all the same, which is something we all too often overlook. If we look at other people simply as human beings instead of as Americans, Mexicans, or Canadians, for example, then we'll realize that the concept of a foreigner is ultimately of no importance.
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