The poem "Ode to Autumn", written by John Keats in 1819, reflects the theme of growth and maturation in the following lines:
"(...) And full-grown lambs loud bleat from hilly bourn; hedge-crickets sing; and now with treble soft the red-breast whistles from a garden-croft; (...) "
In this poem the author wrote about the Autumn's cycle and the life's cycle, using the last prhases of the poem as the declining of the Autumn' season and the ineluctable end of the life. That is the main reason to write about full-grown lambs and the signing of the hedge-crickets, because when winter is coming the harvest is ended and animals have migrated, so the sounds of the animals mentioned in those lines are recovered only when spring comes.
The end of Autumn then, represent the idea of the declining in the life cycle.
In iambic pentameter, each verse consists of five metrical feet. Meter is a poem's rhythm, and feet are units of that rhythm.
In an iamb, an unstressed syllable is followed by a stressed syllable, as in the word "hello."
"Penta" means five, so a verse of iambic pentameter has five iambs.
Five pairs of unstressed syllables followed by stressed syllables.
Five pairs gives a total of ten syllables. So the answer is B, "each line contains ten syllables."
Answer:
The two men cannot communicate well because Joni is speaking Hebrew very fast and Sergei who comes from Russia cannot speak the language very well.
Explanation:
EVIDENCE lines 76-77 ( page 5): “He says all kinds of things, fast things. And it's hard for Sergei to follow; his Hebrew isn't so good''.