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
<span>The basic form for a book citation, according to MLA guidlines, is:
</span>Lastname, Firstname. Title of Book<span>. City of Publication: Publisher, Year of Publication. Medium of Publication.</span><span>
So, it's the last one - Slevin, Mia. Harvesting Hope. Chicago: Shoreline Press, 1998. Print.</span>
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>
In "Sixteen" by Maureen Daly, the narrator expresses how she is an intuitive teenage girl; she knows the trends, and she is up-to-date with the world. She also immediately insists that "I’m not so really dumb. I know what a girl should do and what she shouldn’t". Not only does she describe what she should and shouldn't wear, when she arrives at the skating rink she describes the sky and her surroundings, implying that she is highly detail oriented.
After she states twice that she was not a "dumb" girl, and giving reasons why she wasn't, we realize she was trying to reassure herself of the fact. All logic is out the window once she mets with her love interest, and she feels dumb for believing that he would call her; "for all of a sudden I know, what the stars knew all the time ---- he’ll never, never call --- never".