Is this the entire question!?
Answer: canoniz’d bones X
hearsed in death X
we saw thee
ponderous and marble jaws X
the glimpses of the moon
Explanation: The first one talks about canonized bones which is like when someone dies and is officially declared a saint, so then we obviously know it's about something dead. But hearsed in death is the most telling that it's a grave because it's basically saying the bones are in a container of death (AKA grave). And then ponderous and marble jaws is describing a white fragile jaw hanging open, which definitely points to the jaw of a skeleton. All of these help relate it to a grave which helps find the meaning of sepulchre using context clues. Hope this helps u out!
Answer: The woman who gave this to me was very helpful
Your answer should be Paul the Apostle. Although, Moses wrote many books of the Bible as well.
This is false: it has a very negative connotation.
It refers to a smile that is mocking or contemptuous (or a remark that is mocking or contemptuos) - so it's not a genuine smile, but an ironic and sarcastic smile. It has a negative and not a neutral connotation.