My best guess for the answer to this question is that the listener in My Last Duchess interacts with the speaker while the listener in Life in a Love does not. In My Last Duchess, a rich duke is having a conversation with a man about a portrait of his late wife while negotiating a deal to marry a new woman. Life in a Love is about a man's reaction to a woman possibly leaving him. In the first poem, there seems to be a more active conversation going on. I hope this helps. None of the other answers seem as relevant, so I think this is the right one.
The answer is: creating an analogy.
An analogy is a comparison between two things, based on their structure and for explanatory or clarification purposes.
In the excerpt of St. Thomas Aquinas, the author Chesterton provides a contrast between finding a corner in a curve, and concludes that there is no such thing. As a result, even if the curve is placed upside down and it looks upwards instead of downwards, there is no peak point in the curve.
The word 'lated' is 'likely a Shakespearian version of belated'. It is a contraction, a shortened version of the word belated, meaning basically - late.
Who is the speaker and who is the audience?
Miss Emily shows she couldn't care less about society's rules and expectations in "A Rose for Emily" when she:
- Refuses to have a mailbox.
- Refuses to talk to people or give them explanations.
<h3>Who is Miss Emily?</h3>
Miss Emily is the main character in Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily." She dies at the age of 74, but not without causing much commotion in town throughout her life.
Miss Emily does not seem to care about society's rules. She is set in her ways and does not give in to insistence of any kind. They try to get her to pay taxes, but she refuses to. They also insist that she get a mailbox, but she does not accept it. When people come to her house to talk to her, she turns them away.
Learn more about "A Rose for Emily" here:
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