Answer:
There was an Old man on a hill
Explanation:
Try singing the limerick and use your hand (or foot) to count the beat:
There was an Old man on a hill, = 3 beats
Who seldom, if ever, stood still; = 3 beats
Now try to do triple meter with the next line; quite difficult, don´t you think?
Since a verb phrase might use up to four words, a short adverb—such as also, never, or not—might try to sneak in between the parts. When you find an adverb snuggled in a verb phrase, it is still an adverb, not part of the verb. Read these examples: For her birthday, Selena would also like a radar detector.
The answer to this question is “4- Lela likes to get things done, but Devon likes to think first.”
You forgot to say that this question is about "Ode on a Grecian urn", by Keats.
Answer:
This verse can express that the urn has the capacity to tell a better story and in a more delicate and sensitive way than a poet.
Explanation:
In the line "A flowery tale more sweetly than our rhyme" the poet is extolling the urn's ability to tell the stories he knows and keeps in a beautiful, delicate and sensitive way. This ability is greater than the ability of the poets and the urn does not need rhymes, or any other device, because this ability reflects what it is and is therefore exercised without any effort, but with grace and lightness, being compared to a flower.