Lines 4, 7, 8, and 9 <span>are all examples of figurative language in the poem. Realistic themes for this poem: lies, depression, pain, hurt. A life lesson for this poem could be that it is not always good to hide our feelings because they may overcome us one day.
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Answer:
It represents warmth during the cold winter months.
Explanation:
Answer:
Know Lanyon's thoughts directly.
Explanation:
As the reader reads along, he follows Lanyon's line of thoughts and can deduce what Lanyon thinks about the situation. Lanyon reasons that if his friend's (Dr. Jekyll) messenger could go to one place then his friend should have been able to go another place.
Even if there was a problem, he still wondered why he should have received the messenger in secret. He drew the conclusion that he had a cerebral disease at hand. The reader can directly see what Lanyon's are.
It could give away important evidence that should not be uses to give.
The humor device used here is satire. When using this as a humor device, the narrator mocks someone or something. The lines used are not telling the beauty of the mistress and the speaker of the poem insults her looks. This may be a love poem and shows that the narrator loves the described woman no matter what she looks like.