@Emanualgarzaoz2bcj
did you get it?
I don't know which edition you're referring to. I suppose the lines 43-58 are actually the third paragraph. So, here's the answer:
The narrator's relationship with her husband has changed because of a supernatural influence that she can't exactly explain or fathom. She doesn't really know what happened, when, or why, but at night her husband was not the same person she married. "It’s the moon’s fault, and the blood. It was in his father’s blood," she reasons. Her husband is alienated because of this, and somehow she feels that they don't belong together anymore. He goes out to find those who are like him. "Something comes over the one that’s got the curse in his blood, they say, and he gets up because he can’t sleep, and goes out into the glaring sun, and goes off all alone — drawn to find those like him."
The correct answer is to provide information about the risk they were facing. Just took the test
Answer:
<em>You didn't put any context, but that line doesn't not sound like an end to a romantic poem, nor does it sound very metephorical. It sounds as if Wilde left or commited an action that perhaps his wife did not agree with, and is using this poem to help her "understand". SO B</em>
The paper that is being referred above is <span>"Ode on a Grecian Urn" and "On Seeing the Elgin Marbles" which are poems of John Keats. In the statement, it states the difference between the two wherein "Ode on a Grecian Urn" refers to art as an unchanging truth and "On Seeing the Elgin Marbles" refers to art that changes over time. In this case, the paper states the poems THEMES. </span>