<u>Answer</u>:
D: It accurately represents the personality traits of the king
This best describes the traveler's initial impression of the statue of Ozymandias
<u>Explanation</u>:
 The poem “Ozymandias” by “Percy Bysshe Shelley” is about a traveller who tells the poet that there is a statue of a man called Ozymandias. It has only the legs left standing in the ground and a shattered head in the sand. The king got his statue made in the notion that people would remember him for his greatness and majesty. But he only known for his arrogance.  
Ozymandias was a self-obsessed and arrogant king. He loved himself more than the people of his kingdom. The statue was made by a skilled artisan who made the statue meticulously. He made a stern face of the king, to depict no emotions and wrinkled lips to denote his cruelty. The sculptor wanted to show th
at a person is only remembered for his behaviour.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
across the road lies the rolling lands of greenery, such a beautiful place to spend my leisure time. sprouting from their trusty roots are families of dandelions and daisies as white blurs with yellow in one large haze. that old creaky bench has always been a relaxing spot to sit back and take a load off of my aching feet, when it had been so long that i couldn’t even have recounted my last break. winding paths lead into yet another magical adventures as it’s graced by the depths of trunks and shrubbery. such a place is perfect for comfort and reflection on troubles corrupting in life, the perfect place to relieve stress.
Explanation:
 
        
             
        
        
        
The rhyme scheme in the poem is: a b b a a b b a  c d e c d e. 
There is no end couplet, which makes this poem a Petrarchan sonnet. 
Petrarchan sonnet consists of fourteen lines, the first eight lines (also called oc<em>tave</em>) follow the scheme: a b b a a b b a, and the rhyme scheme of the following six lines (also called <em>sestet</em>) may vary.  
 
        
             
        
        
        
The answer is Caesar won’t read Artemidorus’ letter, which means Artemidorus cannot stop Caesar’s fate: his assassination.