Answer: The sun has a wondrous effect on icy birch branches.
Explanation:
Robert Frost in this excerpt speaks of how birches are affected by ice and then by the environment around them from how the birches are bent by ice to how the icy branches are then affected by the wind, rain and sun.
At the end Robert describes the effect the sun has on the branches and notes how the sun enables the birches to shed to snow in such heaps that one might think a part of heaven has fallen. As heaven is considered so beautiful, it must mean that the effect the sun had was a beautiful and wonderful one.
Romeo and juliet act 1, scene 5, page 4 :)
If you have to much food or if your young
Shakespeare's Juliet is a mixture of caution and passion. In Act I, Scene 5, when she first meets Romeo, who is all passion, she urges him to act naturally, not poetically, and she asks him to swear by the "inconstant moon" in Act II, Scene 2. Now, in this scene Juliet finds herself experiencing conflicting emotions. Certainly, she is troubled that Romeo is the son of her father's mortal enemy; for, as she dreamily contemplates the evening's events, Juliet soliloquizes
“...Romeo doff thy name
And for that name which is no part of thee
Take all myself”
Answer:I am pretty sure it is option D
Explanation:
Hope it helps! <3