<span>Because the rest of your doesn't seem to have been written here, I must assume the allusion you are referring to is </span>possibly from this line; Hamlet calls Polonius Jephthah, after the priest in the Old Testament who sacrifices his daughter to God. This allusion suggests <span>Polonius is sacrificing his daughter to trick Hamlet.</span>
Shan is considered to be a first person narrator because he both tells the story and appears in it.
A first-person narrator would obviously use the first person pronoun (I) to refer to him/herself. So, the entire story is told from this person's point of view, using that particular pronoun. E.g. 'I saw him standing there...' is an example of a first person narration which Shan is an example of. If he were talking about someone else, it would be third-person narration.
Love of nature I think is one of them
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<h3>Firstly, this is not a sentence. Correcting it to “Hurrah! We have won the match.” would be the first step. Note that this is *TWO* sentences, not one. Converting a sentence to pass requires that a sentence have a verb in it. The first sentence has no verb. It can not be converted.</h3>
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<u>PLEASE</u><u> </u><u>MARK</u><u> </u><u>ME </u><u>BRAINLIEST</u><u> AND</u><u> FOLLOW</u><u> ME</u><u> LOTS</u><u> OF</u><u> LOVE</u><u> FROM</u><u> MY</u><u> HEART'AND</u><u> SOUL</u><u> DARLING</u><u> TEJASVINI</u><u> SINHA</u><u> HERE</u><u> ❤️</u></h2>
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How Poetry Works. The most recognizable sound effect used in poems is rhyme. When two words rhyme, they have a similar ending sound. Words that end in the same letters, such as "take" and "make" rhyme, or words with different endings but the same sound rhyme, such as "cane" and "pain.". Poetry also makes use of near rhymes (or slant rhymes),...
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