Answer:
Samia is passing her exam with flying colors.
Explanation:
passing is present
The repetition of the line, "Brennan<span> on the moor/Brennan on the moor/bold and undaunted stood young Brennan on the moor" in the opening and closing stanzas calls the reader to remember the name of the man in this epic-style poem as we begin and end his tragic story.
In the opening lines, the repetition is quite like a battle cry where the person spoken about is seen as our hero. As readers we repeat his name to honor him and call forth his story.
In the closing lines, the repetition is meant to be an homage to the hero of our poem who has died.</span>
They likely refer to Caliban as a monster due to the fact that in the play he was known as a half-man half-monster.In some traditions he is depicted as a wild man, or a deformed man, or a beast man, or sometimes a mix of fish and man, a dwarf or even a tortoise. Showing he is not man, but monster despite his acts.