You take a story and explain the entire thing with only a couple paragraphs, and you don't want to give away any special details that way a person can know a little about the book and want to read it. Like a "A dog and His Ball" is about a lost dog who doesn't have a family and finds an old ball to play with. You would put this on the back of a book and then people would be drawn to read this book. ( I just made something up so it may not make sense sorry.)
I'm not really sure I understand what you are asking, but I tried to answer the best I could, please let me know if this isn't what you meant.
In "Kubla Khan," Coleridge describes the creation and destruction of Kubla Khan's palace in the exotic location of Xanadu, which gives the poem a dreamlike quality. Through the historical character of Kubla Khan, Coleridge uses the wild image of the Mongols to suggest that Kubla Khan is insane, implying that all creative actions are the acts of mad men.
The last lines bring the poem to a climatic close. Flashing eyes evoke the image of passionate creativity. By talking about "holy dread," Coleridge suggests that creation is both sacred and demonic.
Hope that helps :)
The correct answer is B. Sentence.
This sentence is complete with a subject, a verb, and even has a direct object. The subject is “we,” the verb, “parked,” and the direct object is identified by asking “we parked what?”
“Our bicycles” or bicycles” is the direct object, or what is receiving the action being performed by the subject.
I hope this helps!
Confused about what she saw unless she somehow hated him them nope she would be joyful lol but here it looks like she is CONFUSED