<span>I bet you are talking about this dialogue because it is the most famous one that shows Tybalt's feelings of Romeo's' presence :
Patience perforce with willful choler meeting
Makes my flesh tremble in their different greeting.
I will withdraw: but this intrusion shall
Now seeming sweet convert to bitter gall.
If I am right, in this excerpt Shakespeare uses emotional language in Tybalt’s dialogue to evoke the emotion of acceptance.<span>
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The poem "Anecdote of the Jar" doesn't follow a particular end rhyme scheme. Stevens repeats the word hill in the first stanza and Tennessee in the the first and last lines of the poem. He also rhymes the word air with everywhere and bare. Stevens uses internal rhyme in the poem with words such as round, surround, and ground. The lack of traditional rhyme schemes and structure gives the poem a wild and free feel, which mirrors the wilderness described in the poem.
<span>the literal, or dictionary, meaning of a word is called = </span>b) connotation
B, the hook is to get the reader's attention.