This poem is an example of brilliant short lyric which is sectioned into three stanzas. Each stanza carries six lines which help create a simple structure and a regular rhyme scheme- ABABAB.
The author wrote this piece of work in iambic tetrameter. Multiple poetic devices are utilized by Lord Byron, such as alliterations, imagery, metaphors, as well as similes. The diction is also very clear without any complex connotations which ultimately assists the readers to understand the poem more easily.
Therefore, after my analysis of this work, I suggest you to choose option "a", because the author's motif is none other than the option beneath this paragraph.
a) By organizing the poem into three short and even stanzas, Byron is able to convey the work's themes directly and succinctly.
Bedlam: the Hospital of St. Mary of Bethlehem, founded as a priory in 1247; by 1402, it was a hospital or asylum for lunatics; by extension, any madhouse (1663); hence, any scene of mad confusion (1667). Sovereign: a gold coin originally worth 22s.
General Rules:Don't Use "a," "an," or "the" with a plural count noun when you mean "some of many things," "any," "in general.
Ex:"<span>Movies are entertaining (some movies; movies in general).
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Ex:He likes women (in general).</span></span>
They were of wonderful farms where the animals took care of their own affairs and where the humans had been kicked out. had control over themselves and were free from humans