A is correct! Alliteration is the repetitiveness of words and that has a lot of B’s in it.
Answer:
Lifeboat ethics is a metaphor for resource distribution proposed by the ecologist Garrett Hardin in 1974.
Hardin's metaphor describes a lifeboat bearing 50 people, with room for ten more. The lifeboat is in an ocean surrounded by a hundred swimmers. The "ethics" of the situation stem from the dilemma of whether (and under what circumstances) swimmers should be taken aboard the lifeboat.
Hardin compared the lifeboat metaphor to the Spaceship Earth model of resource distribution, which he criticizes by asserting that a spaceship would be directed by a single leader – a captain – which the Earth lacks. Hardin asserts that the spaceship model leads to the tragedy of the commons. In contrast, the lifeboat metaphor presents individual lifeboats as rich nations and the swimmers as poor nations.
Explanation:
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lifeboat_ethics
Academically, cutting it very broad technically, these two geniuses might
be classed as `Romantics` but they are not typical of The Romantics.
You might find, yes, the first answers` suggestions - Keats, Wordsworth, some of Elisabeth Barrett Browning, Christina Rossetti having more the flavour and adornment and/ in rhyme more typical than either Dickinson or Whitman whose deep works reflected more the cultural, than The Romantic zeitgeist. Dickinson, melancholically, Whitman more exuberantly... Though if tyou like them, or one, you will enjoy the task more :) and be more exacting I imagine.
The theme of a poem describes the subject and the tone of a poem reveals the emotion.