7: Complain
8: Breeze
9: Maintain
10: Spain
You have to give more detail
The correct answer is sighing from desire.
Indeed, the lexical field is populated with words that express tenderness, beauty and purity. However, there is a symbolic, underlying carnal desire in the poem. The sibilance is very ambiguous, just as the meaning of the words used to convey it (shade, less, grace, waves, tress). The word “waves” is especially evocative, as it expresses the waves of desire of the narrator for the beautiful woman.
Answer:
A person who is injured often wants to injure another in return
Explanation:
When Farmer Browne said, "I reckon it's not always like that fine scientist B. Franklin once said, "...the rotten apple spoils his companion?", he meant "a person who is injured often wants to injure another in return".
This means that someone can decide to injure other people in any way possible just because they were also injured.
A bad apple among other good apples will definitely cause harm (rottenness) to other good ones. This harm can be an injury or a bad influence.