Pretty sure it's the fact that something exists
He took a tone that was quite lyrical and expressed the need to end the war.
In his gettysburg address Lincoln started to redefine the Civil War as a struggle for human equality not only to save the Union. He extolled the memory of those who died during the Gettysburg battle.
In his second inauguration adress the defeat of the South was very close and he tried to appease his audience by advocating a fair treatment of the South.
Answer:
Is this the question?
Explanation:
"He's in every lover . . . beneath a window" is an allusion to Romeo that is recognizable even to readers who have not read Romeo and Juliet. What does the repetition of the words "in every" throughout the poem signal to readers? What message does Tempest convey through these words?