I love Wordsworth :) In this poem, he is not really asserting that heaven is better, as he does not mention heaven or the afterlife. So, the answer is not A, and it cannot be D. That leaves B and C. Let's consider the poem. One line in the poem mentions "getting and spending," and is followed by "Little we see in Nature that is ours," which suggests that people are spending their time and money on frivolous, material things when they could be spending their time appreciating the natural world around them. This suggests that B is the more proper answer. I hope this helps.
A poem's rhyme scheme is usually marked with letters - such as ABAB.
Answer: Option B
<u>Explanation:</u>
Rhyme Schemes are the patterns of sounds that are repeated at the end of every line in the poem. For example:
‘The sun was glowing,
The stars were sparkling,
The waves were flowing,
And the forests were darkling.’
Here you can see the first and the third line makes a rhyme scheme ‘glowing-flowing’, and the second and fourth makes another rhyme scheme ‘sparkling-darkling.’
Such rhyme scheme in poems are marked with letters ABCD. So for the given example the rhyme scheme is ABAB.
Paragraph 2 explains decompression
A because you can see the words more clearly