We need to use process of elimination to determine what the best answer is for this question. If we look at choice B, there is nothing in the excerpt that suggests Helen doesn't like getting attention. In fact, being described as an exclamation point would contradict this to a point.
Answer C is highly improbable. There is nothing in the excerpt that suggests she can speak both of those languages.
Answer D, much like B and C, is improbable. While she is described using punctuation marks, there is nothing to suggest that she is enthusiastic about them.
Returning to Answer A, this seems the most likely answer because when one uses an exclamation mark in writing, it shows enthusiasm or outbursts. Looking at the description of Helen as "enthusiastic and impressionable," describing her as a human exclamation mark is a good choice. It is because of this that A is the best answer.
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.
Answer:
how Lee treated grant with suspicious
B personification because he is giving the dagger human like abilities