Answer:
At the beginning
Explanation:
Right at the beginning of the text, where a woman is obsessed with her appearance, looking every day in the mirror, and with shaking hands, and eyes watering, she feels bad to see her, accepting her wrinkled hands and your face too. She cries, she could be young and beautiful, but feel bad all the time.
The correct answers are
[<u>(b.) And in this flea our two bloods mingled be;]
</u>
<u>Thou know'st that this cannot be said</u>
and
[(d.) And pampered swells with one blood made of two;
And this, alas, is more than we would do.]
In this poem, the flea clearly symbolizes their love.
In the answer (b.), their bloods are mixed in this flea and this could metaphorically signify mixing their bodily fluids while engaging in intercourse.
In the answer (d.), it is clear that the speaker is denied intercourse with this woman and extends his argument from the sentence (b.) that their bloods mixed in the flee signify their physical union and that, despite what the society might suggest about her loss of virginity, there is nothing shameful about this act.
The answer to the question is c)
You would need the text to answer the question