<span>I would say that of the four excerpts listed the one that best illustrates Byron's appreciation of beauty would be the second - 'The nameless grace/Which waves in every raven tress'. This expresses the sentiment that beauty is not necessarily something tangible, but rather something that can be embodied in something so simple as the movement of hair.</span>
It's not. To be in first person point of view, the narrator would need to say "I" and "me" when referring to them self. Since <em>Romeo and Juliet</em> doesn't have a narrator that uses "I" or "me" it isn't in the first person point of view.
The English geographer and author Richard Hakluyt c. 1552-1616 was one of the first practical geographers in England and an important promoter of the English colonization of North America. The second son of Richard Hakluyt, a London skinner, Richard Hakluyt attended Westminster School.
I hope this helps:)