Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem the Rime of the Ancient Mariner seems to be full of alliteration which helps the poem to rhyme and also helps the poem to flow smoothly and I would say makes it seem told with excitement. Some examples are "The guests are met, the feast is set" ie with met and set though the first letters are not the same the last letters "et" are so they rhyme nicely. Another similar example is " The wedding guest stood still" and "The Mariner hath his will" using "still" and "will" with similar spellings, and then "The ship was cheered, the harbour cleared" where the two words "cheered" and "cleared" sound very similar but have different meanings so the similar sounds tie the two thoughts together and seem to unify them.
C. Informal
Explanation:
Prewriting is the first stage of the writing process, typically followed by drafting, revision, editing and publishing. Prewriting can consist of a combination of outlining, diagramming, storyboarding, mindmapping. Prewriting is the "generating ideas" part of the writing process when the student works to determine the topic and the position or point-of-view for a target audience. Informal is the Informal Outlining in which a list of the main ideas and details related to the specified topic in the order in which they will likely be addressed is written.
The option is D. Love isn’t as necessary as and shelter is, but love is very important
If we analyze some of the lines of the poem.
..”<em>Love is not all: it is not meat or drink….
</em>
The author clearly states that love is not necessary to survive or to live.
When the author writes:
”<em> love cannot fill the thickened lung with breath, not clean the blood, nor set the fractured bone yet many a men are making friends with death”</em>
again is saying that love is not necessary to live, however, it is important to the way we live or relate with each other. It is clearly explained that a person can easily live without love. Love is always as an option, a tool, not a vital element in a person's life.