Some strategies you can use to read poems are:
Read the title- The poem is probably going to go with the title.
Write down words you don't understand and look them up later- Trust me, it helps!
If you don't understand the poem the first time, read it again. Often I find myself confused about something I read, so I read it again and it usually helps.
In poems I look for words that I know, then make connections with those words.
I also look for rhyming words, I know it sounds silly but it helps me a lot!
Hope this is helpful!
After her marriage with Edgar, the Lintons do whatever Catherine asks at Thrushcross Grange. The correct answer is D.
Edgar has seen Catherine in a temper and becomes very careful never to upset her. In Thrushcross she is treated like a princess.
don't know your exact grade but here's my take on it.
the structure and punctuation of a sentence can provide a certain mood with its uses in a passage. certain things like elipses, sudden periods, hypens, spaced out sentences, repitions of questions. it all bring a sense of reality to a reader and let's better immersion happen because of it. without it, you would just be reading a block of text. no sense on how to read it or how to feel. to be hit with a sudden period- it can show the sternness of a scene. whilst spaced out sentences can have a sort of flowy vibe, the uncleanness of ones thoughts in a slow recollection. whilst a lot of questions can show excitement, curiosity, or even uncertainty of a situation. all of it provides a reader with a sense of immersion, able to think on the same plan as the characters/narrator.
thats my take! I highly recommend you write your own! :)