The question was cut off so I don’t know all of what it’s asking. Sorry.
Answer:
The third one
Explanation:
The third one is the one which most reveal an omniscient point of view because it depicts in a clear way the thoughts and feelings of the character involved in this part of the story (the King), so it transcends what we as readers or what every character can see, and displays something deeper.
B I think <3<3<3<3 hope its right
The fundamental thought of Paul Revere's Ride is needing to free America from England. In his sincere enthusiasm, he was not hesitant to ride on a pony to caution Massachusetts of the landing of British states. He yells, "The British are coming!", taking a chance with his life just to free America.
These were the accompanying metaphors he used to pass on the possibility of his heroic valiance.
Metaphor: "over the moon like a jail bar"
Similar sounding word usage: "struck out by a steed flying courageous and armada"
Embodiment: "the careful night twist, as it went, crawling from tent to tent"
Sound similarity: "on then rising tide like a scaffold of water crafts"
The general sonnet design was in an account shape.
The answer is to describe typical winter weather, its used very commonly throughout the story, just check back to the book