The tone in the last stanza is regretful. The poem is about a man who received advice from a wise man that he can give away all his wealth but not his heart. He's told that once you give away your heart, you lose it and end up regretting it. He experiences it and regrets afterwards.
<span>what the writer bases his beliefs or feels to be true based on knowledge of the subject</span>
Answer: Metaphor if a person is speaking and comparing him/herself to fire-- perhaps an emotional state, or expressing an intention to light things up.
Personification if the fire is speaking. It may be a poetic, ceremonial speech.
"I am fire. I represent the passion and fervor of these candidates...."
Explanation:
Context helps to determine the interpretation of any figurative language.
"There are wheels within wheels in this village and fires within fires<span>." Explain this quote from The Crucible. accessteacher | Certified Educator. The quote in this question comes from Act I and is said by Mrs. Putnam when she is arguing with Rebecca about the cause and the reason for her many miscarriages.</span>
<span>Emerson might advocate the benefits of consistency in the natural world. If one day, the grass was green, and the next, it was blue, Emerson might rethink his whole philosophy with hating conformity. Of course, it is good to be unique, but grass of a same species, should be uniform and stay the “right” color.</span>