(D)I an determined to prove a villain And hate the idle pleasures of these days
Answer:
The poet is expressing a wish for immortality.
Explanation:
John Keats's poem <em>Ode to a Nightingale</em> is about the poet's happiness in sharing in the happiness of the nightingale. The poem also deals with the theme of immortality, mortality, and death that the poet addresses.
The given excerpt from the poem is taken from the seventh stanza of the poem. In this stanza, the poet declares how the nightingale is immortal, for its song has been heard by emperors and clowns from generations past. This stanza seems to reveal the poet's desire to be immortal like the bird.
Thus, the correct answer is the fourth or last option.
Answer:
When I was little I had hallucinations. I saw demonic-looking figures but when I was little I assumed they were angels. As I grew up I became more terrorized by them and by the age of 14 I was diagnosed with severe psychosis.
Explanation:
These hallucuinations and my illness actually ruined a lot of my child hood. I had asociality and contracted multiple neurologoical tics because I was not given help earlier