Answer:
D. "Love."
Explanation:
John Keats's "Ode on a Grecian Urn" is a recollection of when the poet addresses an ancient Grecian Urn. The lines in the question are from the second stanza of the poem.
This ancient item has a picture of a young man and his lover, him playing a pipe and she lying under a tree. Keats exclaims that the unheard melodies that he is playing are much sweeter than anything else as they are unaffected by time. The young man may not be able to kiss his love but he should not worry for they are already engraved in the picture which will forever stay. They are frozen in time, with their beauty intact and their love will last forever no matter how time goes.
Answer:
The line
"The stout king stands in state
Till a wonder shall appear;"
in the excerpt from the poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight shows that the knight king is awaiting something miraculous to happen at the Christmas celebration.
Explanation:
hope this helps
correct me if this is wrong
1. "Annabel Lee" - Edgar Allan Poe
2. the section of a sonnet that sets the theme- octave
3. pioneer of free verse- Walt Whitman
4. unrhymed iambic pentameter – blank verse
5. an example of consonance - "Success”
6. an example of irony "The Snake"
7. a word picture- image
8. a repetition of consonant sounds at the beginnings of words in a line of poetry- alliteration
9. a two-syllable foot
10. "Birches"- Robert Frost
<span>The right answer here is A - Christopher Marlowe was rumored to be a spy for the English Catholics during his lifetime. The reasons for this rumour came from various pieces of unconnected evidence, including information that he meant to attent an English Catholic college overseas.</span>
The colonists' righteous anger toward the monarchy.