Simile. It's comparing using the word like.
Answer:
connecting subjects
Explanation:
but am not sure about that
Answer:
A) She uses comparisons to show the speaker’s connection to the snake .
Explanation:
Well, in the poem, she sees a snake slithering through the grass. With that view, she remembers a time when she was younger and interacted with a snake:
"A narrow fellow in the grass...
------------------------------------------------
Yet when a child, and barefoot,
I more than once, at morn..."
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dickinson also said how the snake seemed scary to a lot of people, but in reality it was not:
"But never met this fellow,
Attended or alone,
Without a tighter breathing,
And zero at the bone.
Based on the given passage above, when Bertie says he feels like a "badly wrapped brown-paper parcel" he means that he feels tired and out of sorts. Therefore, the correct answer of the given question above would be the first option: tired and out of sorts.