Coleridge and Wordsworth were both against Byron, under the means that he betrayed the likes of romanticism. Thanks for asking, and gimme brainliest I need to rank up :D
In stanza seven, comparing mice and humans, the author Robert Burns suggests that foresight and planning the future can go wrong for everyone, either mice or humans.
However, in the final stanza Burns still considers the mouse fortunate, because it is only aware of the present moment. It is a human attribute to look at the past and to fear what the future has to bring.
Answer:
sitting like a stone does still, silent, and cold
Explanation:
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