The correct answer is:
What would happen if love didn’t die?
An independent clause is a clause that can stand alone as a sentence. When you read the sentence "what would happen if love didn’t die? you could use it as a sentence by itself, doesn't need any complement to make sense. On the other hand, the sentence "If the poem is about going mad when love is lost," is the dependent clause, because it needs a complementary sentence to complete the idea.
I think he may be right. But I have not read the whole thing, so I may be wrong.
The mood of the poem is sad and dark, describing where the bones of someone's father are laying (at the bottom of the ocean.). Alliteration helps convey this mood because the repetition of sounds, especially the 'f' and 's' sounds, make a sound that resembles the rush of waves or the sound you hear if you're underwater.
The first example is in the first line, the 'f' sound is repeated in "Full Fathom Five thy Father lies". Then, for a second example, in lines 4-7, the 's' sound is repeated in "Suffer a Sea-change / Into Something rich and Strange. / Sea-nymphS". Again, those two sounds represent the sound and feeling of being underwater where the body is resting.
<span>1. Each author uses non-English words and figurative language.</span>
<span> The rhetorical appeal from Act III. In Scene II of Julius Caesar is pathos, the rhetor is attempting to persuade the audience, as well as influincing them to feel a certain way, or having certain emotions. "When the poor have cried, Caesar hath wept" (III.ii.88) -Julius Caesar.</span>