Bro.. what happened with to you? How did you mess that up
The correct answer is <span>a. Crossing the Bar
The poem deals with the end of a life, more precisely, he wrote it after his son died. It perfectly fits the role of being a final poem in a collection.</span>
<span>See', 'be', and 'tree' all have the same rhyming sound, that long e, and so they fall under the A, because the long e sound is present first in the poem.
As for B, you make a word the B in a rhyme scheme when it completes the phrase when A did not. If the second line had ended with something with a long e as its final sound, then you would have not gone on to B, but kept A.
Since 'hear' does not rhyme with 'see', it is counted as B. The third and fourth lines go back to the long e sound we have denoted as A, and then the fifth line brings us back to B, because near rhymes with 'hear'.
Every stanza holds this rhyming scheme.</span>
Because the cause of the crisis is many European countries.