Answer:
I don't think you need a comma in this sentence but if you do the only place I can think of putting one before "Susan" but I don't think that's right
Explanation:
The correct answer is D) 'to bend with apples the moss'd cottage-trees / and fill all fruit with ripeness to the core' - because he talks about the richness of nature and its fruit / vegetables.
Who's Elisa, and what book and/or passage are you reading? Nobody can answer without that context.
A is the actually correct answer