As dew leaves the cobweb lightly Threaded with stars, The language and imagery in these opening lines depict brightness.
Answer: A
Explanation
In this poem, the poet starts with the joy that is spread all throughout the first two lines.
Moving forward the brightness of the poem disappears to sadness and a feeling of loneliness.
It feels as if the poet is missing someone who was supposed to be close to her but has left her alone.
She remembers the love she once felt and compares it to the sights she sees in her life.
The Canterbury Tales are a collection of 24 stories written in middle English and show how people differ, from the highest to the lowest of classes.<span />
Answer:
To withhold meaningful details from the audience
Explanation:
By allowing the audience to know important facts ahead of the leading characters, dramatic irony puts the audience and readers above the characters, and also encourages them to anticipate, hope, and fear the moment when a character would learn the truth behind events and situations of the story.