It is chiefly imagistic and involves symbolism, often private in nature; you can think of Eliot and Yeats
King Arthur and the knights want to obtain the holy grail, they most likely died.
<h3>How explain your answer?</h3>
In King Arthur's Knights, we learn that many knights tried to go in pursuit of the Holy Grail. These knights accompanied Sir Galahad, who is the only one considered worthy enough to find it.
The group separated, as they believed this would make their mission easier. Although we do not learn what happened to the other knights, it is implied that they all died. It is only Galahad, Bors and Percival who were able to continue the journey.
Thus, this could be the answer.
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Answer: You would be describing the setting and what everything around looks like to give us a feel of the story.
Explanation:
<span>The animals agree they have enough strength to take control from Napoleon but decide they are not smart enough.
True </span>
The kind of poem reading that the lines above represent is literal reading. There are no figures of speech here, such as metaphors, personifications, etc. which is why it's not a symbolic, figurative, or analytical reading. There is nothing to analyze here - the lines just tell the story of an eagle searching for its prey - it can't get any more literal than that.