Answer:
Trochees are less common than other types of metrical feet in poetry, but they have a unique sound and purpose when they are featured in poems. Trochees can be used to great effect for the following reasons: Trochaic lines flow easily from one to the next. Trochaic meter ends on an unstressed syllable
Explanation:
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Your answer would be A. The teacher explains how you cannot teach children to love a subject if they are taught simply for testing.
No it’s not, if you read it aloud it doesn’t make sense !!!
Answer:
They make reader see their love in spiritual terms.
Explanation:
Line 3 and 4 of Elizabeth Barrett's sonnet 43 (<em>How Do I Love Thee? Let Me Count the Ways</em>) are;
<em>"My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight
</em>
<em>For the Ends of Being and ideal Grace."</em>
In these lines she wants to tell her beloved and readers that she loves her beloved as much as her soul can reach and where she feels out of sight. She is measuring her love in term of the reach of her soul which is infinite.
<em>Ideal Grace</em> is somewhat ambiguous here, but it most probably means "to the perfection". So we can interpret she loves her beloved to the perfection. Since Elizabeth Barrett was very religious, <em>Ideal Grace</em> may also mean to some religious concept as interpreted by herself.
<em>Soul</em> being a completely spiritual concept, so reference to soul makes the reader view her love in spiritual terms.