The connection between the poem and Pan is said like this, "<span>the goat-footed balloonMan whistles far and wee,"
Pan is a God that is half human half goat, so that stanza provides that Pan is somewhat included in the poem.
I wont be answering the second part because I dont want to make any mistakes for you
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It isn't simile, because there is no comparison to anything, and it isn't ironic.
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The dreadful Passage of their death-marked Love and the continuation of their parents' wrath, which nothing could erase save their children's death, is now our stage's two-hour trafficka.
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The answer is: Character against nature
This is because the nature of the wind pushed his ship off course using the sails