Sample Response: "Sea Fever” by John Masefield uses several poetic devices that classify it as a fixed form poem. It has three stanzas of four lines each; it has a repeating aabb, ccdd, eeff rhyme scheme; and each line is about the same length and uses the same rhythmic pattern.
The answer is D
Hope I helped :)
Answer:
"this i believe"
Explanation:
I had to write about this TWICE in highschool, so trust me, you can at least re use the paper. write about your biggest belief. Something you are passionate about. Write about why you believe it and how you became to believing it.
I wrote about how everything happens for a reason, my life motto. It is silly but once you get writing you can't stop. If you need to quote sources, go to "thisibelieve.org" there are great resources to quote there too.
OOO orrrr write about taking risks. Write about why you should or shouldn't take risks. Share stories, those always work as space fillers too!
Answer:
The dreariness of the speaker’s life away from Innisfree.
Explanation:
The lines 'While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements grey, I hear it in the deep heart’s core' refer to a feeling of closeness to and remembrance of a place dear to the speaker’s heart. There is an implicit sense of removal, of physical distance, contrasted to an emotional proximity.
So we know it reflects his life away from the idyllic Innisfree. Futhermore, the general tone of the phrase, the depiction of the pavements' colour (rather a dull one), appear to suggest a certain general dreariness.