When you say "Which ... ", are you saying "Here's a list of choices.
Please select your answer from the list." ?
If so, then there's something definitely missing here.
And since my answer is not restricted to the list of choices you provided,
I get to pick any line of poetry I want to.
<em>to BE or NOT to BE that IS the QUES</em> tion.
This is iambic pentameter.
(The "-tion" kind of hangs off at the end, but hey ! It's Shakespeare.
Wotta ya gonna do. You can't tell him anything.)
A tercet is a three line stanza.
It's not a genre, nor a rhyming scheme, nor is it a figure of speech. Tercets usually have more than 4 syllables per line.
In the end of the short story "The Old Chief Mshlanga", the girl's father decides to keep the twenty goats that trampled down his land. This decision deeply affected Chief Mshlanga's people, since these goats belonged to them, and not having them would mean that they would go hungry when the dry season begins. Thus, it was selfish from him to keep the goats.