Answer:
Which sound device(s) is the words morrow, borrow, and sorrow examples of? Rhyme.
Why does the speaker repeat sorrow?
The speaker repeats sorrow, because the poem is letting off the feeling of an errie, and sad feeling.
The use of rhyme would be:
"Eagrly I wished the morrow; -vainly I had sought to borrow."
There is also the sentence " Ah, distinctivly I remeber it was in the bleak december."
Bleak has mulitple meanings: Cold, empty, and grim.
Even though bleak has different meanings, those three words still make it sound sad, and depressing. <- Mood
Hope It Helps! :)
Hello there☺️,
According to your question:-
1) Cite three lines from the poem that reveal the author's tone.
Ans:-
"I seem to remember people, atleast in cities"
"Do you see nothing watching you under the water?"
"Whose dream is this, I would like to know:"
The above three lines, clearly shows that he is a talkative, curious as well as a calm person.
2) Then summarize Atwood's attitude in a sentence.
Ans:- The attitude of Atwood is quite strange. He is a curious person, and after his curiosity is over, he is questioning whether why it happened or how. In short, he is a peculiar person.
✍️ <em>By </em><em>Benjemin</em> ☺️
Answer: The answer is 4
Explanation: because 4 and 7 are the best numbers and 4 is less than 7
Shakespeare's plays were so popular because they contained comedy and drama. The comedies were the things people enjoyed at the time, while the dramas were just dramas. The comedies were like modern movies, while the tragedies were more like dramas. Shakespeare always knew how to blend the serious play with the funny play. Without comedy, drama stays, without comedy-drama also remains. Shakespeare was also prolific in producing many plays and also wrote many famous sonnets.
Shakespeare never wrote for a specific society, as other playwrights did. Compared to other playwrights, Shakespeare had flaws.
The effectiveness as a playwright, as in why his plays were so popular, is because his plays contained a lot of messages in every play. The most famous, of course, was the message of being 'taught one's mind, speech and heart' (Othello Act IV, scene V, lines 57-57). Everybody has learned their lesson of why people are taught the mind, trust, and faith, speech and heart.
Shakespeare did not write for the time he lived in.