The poetic device that Yeats used in the underlined portion is that of A. alliteration - repetition of beginning sounds of words in close proximity.
<h3>What device was used by Yeats?</h3>
Yeats used alliteration when he used foolish and full because both of them are pronounced in a similar way at their beginnings.
Alliterations are best noticed when the similar words are fused close to each other as foolish and full were used.
Find out more on alliteration at brainly.com/question/536028.
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Answer:
metaphor
Explanation:
The phrase does not use "like" or "as", like a simile would, it is not giving an object a human characteristic, and it is not trying to make a reference, so it is a metaphor. Hope this helped
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After having Psyche whipped by Worry and Sadness and then mocking her for conceiving a child in a sham marriage, Venus ordered Psyche to sort out a great mass of mixed wheat, barley, poppyseed, chickpeas, and lentils, and that she must do it by dawn. Venus then goes to a wedding feast, and a kind ant brings several other ants to do the work for her. Angry, Venus gives Psyche a crust of bread. Psyche then learns that Cupid is also in the house, suffering from his injury, sustained when Psyche spilled hot oil on him.
Venus then insists that Psyche cross a river and gather golden wool from some violent sheep belonging to the sun. Intending to drown herself, Psyche receives advice form a divinely inspired reed and gathers the wool caught on briers.
The third task Venus gives Psyche is to collect water from the source of the River Styx in a crystal vial. Jupiter, moved by Psyche's plight, sends his own eagle to do the work for her.
Finally, Venus sends Psyche to the Underworld to get some of Porsopina's beauty. Instructed how to go about this task by the tower from which Psyche was going to fling herself, Psyche retrieves the box from Porsopina, and is barely back in the light of day when she opens the box out of curiosity and ends up in a deep Stygian sleep.
However, by this point, Cupid has healed and escaped his mother's house. He flies to Psyche, revives her, puts the sleep back into the box, and flies Psyche to present the box to Venus.
<span>Jupiter then gives his blessing to the marriage, orders Venus to back off, and gives Psyche some ambrosia, allowing Psyche and Cupid to be wed as equals.</span>
The primary conflict in this paragraph is external: Meimei vs. Lau Po.
In this paragraph Meimei is excited to see a congregation of people sharing their love for chess, so she runs home to get a chess set to join and practice with them as well. The conflict in this scene happens when the man, who will soon be introduced as Lau Po, makes an assumption based on Meimei's gender. He surmises that because Meimei is a girl, she must be in the park to play with dolls, and this causes Meimei to be offended as she wants to be seen as a serious chess player.