<span>The "fearful symmetry" clearly refers to the entire body of the tiger. The poem is about God, and is asking whether an omnipotent being could construct such an animal. Thus, the entire animal is subject to analysis.</span>
The correct answer is I, II, and III.
The first sentence support the thesis statement by using a metaphor: it compares a settler cleaning weeds from a corn field with men killing all types of life to comfortably settle in a land.
The second sentence expresses how men have devoted years and centuries developing and improving different types of weapons that would make them better killers.
And the third sentence shows that man has taken his desire for killing so far that he even wants to kill the microorganisms that live in their homes.
When reading "To My Dear and Loving Husband," we can analyze the rhymes at the end of the lines. The poem follows a scheme of paired rhymes (AABB), however the lines "My love is such that rivers cannot quench, // Nor ought but love from thee give recompense," present an irregularity, which can be interpreted as a way of showing that only her husband can satisfy her desires. In other words, we can say that the irregularity in the rhyme was positioned exactly when the poet was referring to a force that was not natural to her husband, but external to him.
Answer:
But I broke my leg when I fell on the sidewalk
Explanation: