The best description to the statement "A Thought on the inestimable blessing of reason" and "Deliverance from another sore fit" is that in the poems given the speakers expresses humility before a superior force, deals with great pride and doubts to their abilities.
Answer:
Any piece of writing is shaped by external factors before the first word is ever set down on the page. These factors are referred to as the rhetorical situation, or rhetorical context, and are often presented in the form of a pyramid.
Drawing of three two-sided arrows in the shape of a pyramid. Where points meet on top, "Purpose"; bottom left, "Author"; bottom right, "Audience." "Message" is in the middle.
The three key factors–purpose, author, and audience–all work together to influence what the text itself says, and how it says it. Let’s examine each of the three in more detail.
An open-ending story occurs when readers are left uncertain about how the story is resolved. As the writer introduces a series of events but does not openly state a conclusion, readers must use their imagination to determine how the characters and situations come to an end.
An example of a open-ending story is Frank R. Stockton's short story "The lady or the Tiger?," in which a knight is forced to open one of two doors: behind one there is a lady he does not love, and behind the other there is a fierce tiger. At the end of the story, the author asks, "And so I leave it with all of you: Which came out of the opened door - the lady, or the tiger?"