You forgot to say that this question is about "Ode on a Grecian urn", by Keats.
Answer:
This verse can express that the urn has the capacity to tell a better story and in a more delicate and sensitive way than a poet.
Explanation:
In the line "A flowery tale more sweetly than our rhyme" the poet is extolling the urn's ability to tell the stories he knows and keeps in a beautiful, delicate and sensitive way. This ability is greater than the ability of the poets and the urn does not need rhymes, or any other device, because this ability reflects what it is and is therefore exercised without any effort, but with grace and lightness, being compared to a flower.
The overriding idea in any piece of fiction is known as its theme.
I fell like A maybe is the answer...
The mistake that the author made in using an in-text citation is:
- B. Restating the source's author
<h3>What is an In-text citation?</h3>
An in-text citation is a reference to a quotation made by an author on a certain page of his book.
Often there is a separate bibliography underneath the text that contains the full name of the author, the book's title, year, of publication, and publisher.
There was no need for the author of the text above to restate the source's author because that will cause a redundancy.
Learn more about in-text citation here:
brainly.com/question/8130130
#SPJ1