Answer:
Emphasize the vast emptiness of the scene.
Explanation:
P.B. Shelley' poem "Ozymandias" describes the ruined state of the great king Ozymandias. And despite the king's boastful nature of what he had done, the statue is all alone in the vast desert, with nothing else to show his 'great work' that he'd boasted about.
In the last two lines of the poem, alliteration occurs in <em>"bound and bare"</em> and also in <em>"lone and level sand stretch".</em> These words emphasize how empty the scene is, despite the boastful attitude of the ancient king. The alliteration words only show how lonely and sightless the scene of the statue really is.
Thus, the correct answer is the last/fifth option.
Answer:
In this poem, Blake present the ideas of revenge powerfully by asserting that how he watered the wrath for his foe in his heart.
Explanation:
The Poison Tree is a poem written by William Blake. The poem is about how suppressing the emotions of resentment, anger, and revenge can have adverse consequences.
The poet writes that when he was angry with his friend, he did not conceal it and the emotion of hurt did not stay. But when he became angry with his foe, he concealed it, watered it, and eventually let the wrath come against his foe in the form of murdering him.