The forlorn speaker of this poem addresses the woman he loves, fearing that death will take away both her and his chance for fame.
Answer: Option D.
<u>Explanation:</u>
"When I Have Fears" is a poem written by John Keats. The poet in this poem gives immense importance to the ultimate reality of the life of the human being which is death.
The poem conveys an essential message that everything in this world such as love, fame, beauty are just transitory. They are all going to fade away and are all temporary. Nothing in this world is permanent. Death will take away his beloved also from him and he fears an early death.
Answer:
The war in the West and the blockade were putting pressure on the South.
Answer:
<h3><u><em>
Daniel Defoe's A Journal of the Plague Year is a first-person</em></u>, mostly nonlinear narrative told by protagonist H.F., an unmarried saddler whose name is only revealed by his signature at the end of the work. The Journal is a tale of his experiences during the plague that afflicted London in 1665; <u><em>
the work is thus fiction but is peppered with statistics, data, charts, and government documents. H.F. begins by relating rumors that the plague had come to Holland, and closely follows the bills of mortality.</em></u></h3>
Explanation:
A. her father does not approve