Answer:
Consider the following example, a translation of “Sonnet 227” by Petrarch, by A.S. Kline:
Breeze, blowing that blonde curling hair, stirring it, and being softly stirred in turn, scattering that sweet gold about, then gathering it, in a lovely knot of curls again,
you linger around bright eyes whose loving sting pierces me so, till I feel it and weep, and I wander searching for my treasure, like a creature that often shies and kicks:
now I seem to find her, now I realise she’s far away, now I’m comforted, now despair, now longing for her, now truly seeing her.
Happy air, remain here with your living rays: and you, clear running stream, why can’t I exchange my path for yours?
Explanation:
This created better sound qualities and productivity. More people could buy and learn an instrument. More instruments could join into the orchestra. Sections were duplicated to make sound broader, and many musicians used this to express their emotions better.
Symmetry is <span>the quality of being made up of exactly similar parts facing each other or around an axis.</span>