Answer:
The excerpt from:
- "Annabel Lee" is written in a sestet
- "In Memorium" is written in a quatrain
- "Nothing Gold Can Stay" is written in an octave
- "Hero and Leander" is written in couplets
Explanation:
A sestet is a stanza composed of six lines, a quatrain of four lines, an octave is written in eight lines, and a couplet is a set of two rhyming lines, usually written in the same meter.
It is important to note that the definitions of all these types of stanzas have varied with different works and origins and some can further be classified into various sub-types depending on their position in the poem, meter, use, etc., and can be further elaborated with typical rhyme schemes that they use; however, the common aspect that they share is the number of lines, which is what the question is based on.
Answer:
1 thank you lina please come to see the compitition.
2 welldone I'm glad to hear that.
I believe A would be the best way to keep the original meaning while making it simple to understand.
The right answer is: "The nurse does not know that Nora will leave her children, but the audience does."
When Torvald humiliates Nora, he tries to apologize with her, but she has changed, she realized her husband is a very strange man for her and in her marriage was always a doll, so she decided the only way to recognize herself is leaving from the house.