Answer:
B) Nature enriches us through memory even when we are far from it.
Explanation:
The question is from William Wordsworth's <em>I Wondered Lonely as a Cloud.</em> Wordsworth, being a romantic poet, appreciates the beauty and liveliness of nature. The major theme of the poem is the impact of nature on humans. The poet describes one of his solitary walks and his encounter with "A host, of golden daffodils". He describes the sight as, "Beside the lake, beneath the trees, Fluttering and dancing in the breeze."
Wordsworth then says that he envisions the sight again in his mind whenever he feels lonely. Now, even though he isn't currently watching them, just the thought of them of remembering them, puts him in a state of nostalgia.
No it is not a personification. A personification is when you give human attributes to an object. For example, “The trees see everything.” The trees do not have eyes so they cannot really see but they are always there and always watching.
Answer:
1. An image.
2. Richard Tottle.
3. Concrete.
4. Sonnet.
5. Sir Philip Sidney.
6. Edmund Spencer.
7. Archaic.
8. The Dark Lady.
9. Sir Frances Bacon.
Explanation:
1. An image: a word picture. It is graphical representation or illustration of something such as people, place, animal, plants, etc.
2. Richard Tottle: responsible for the first collection of songs and lyrics in England. He was an English publisher who had a shop at Temple bar in London, United Kingdom.
3. Concrete: something that can be perceived by the senses. It simply a things that is capable of being acknowledged by any of the five sense organs such as eyes, nose, tongue, etc.
4. Sonnet: means little song in Italian. It comprises of 14 lines with five-foot iambics.
5. Sir Philip Sidney: wrote Italian sonnet
6. Edmund Spencer: The Faerie Queen.
7. Archaic: belonging to an earlier period, outdated.
8. The Dark Lady: subject of Shakespeare's sonnets
9. Sir Frances Bacon: famous writer of interludes.
What? ( filling in the 20 characters
Answer:
Sorry I'm not from commerse background