Come again? I'm not understanding the question.
1. in and of.
2. in.
3. to.
4. of.
5. into (off could be a preposition but in this case is part of the phrasal verb 'to send off')
Answer:
I can infer that she has been doing this whole thing in a play and then realized that she doesn't need to be neat.
Explanation: is that an answer choice???
The rhyme scheme consists of a discernible pattern of rhymes (words corresponding to other words in sounds) at the end of the lines, or in the middle. In this case, the rhyme scheme is as follows: ABBAABBACDCDCD. Look at the ending words of each line, and you'll notice the pattern: "saint" - "grave" - "gave" - "faint" (the first rhymes with the fourth, and the second rhymes with the third); the same with "taint" - "save" - "have" - "restraint". The rest of them: "mind" - "sight" - "shin'd" - "delight" (the first and the third rhyme with each other, just like the second and the fourth), etc.