It looks pretty good to me but i am not an english major
<span>In Percy Bysshe Shelley's "Ozymandias," what effect is created by the poet's use of phrases like "antique land," "shattered visage," and "ye Mighty"?
The answer is letter A. </span><span>They instill the poem with a sense of futility and hopelessness.</span>
In my opinion, the correct answer is A. simile. You can see that in the construction "four men (...) like burglars". A simile is actually a comparison that always follows this formula: A is like B. It usually uses the conjunctions (like/as), but sometimes, in its shorter form, it doesn't even need them. We don't see a metaphor here - every word is used in its literal meaning. We don't see an irony either. As for syntax, it is not even a literary device.
painfully escaping reality in my dreams
Explanation:
im not sure bout this one but i hope it helps