My answer is why not? There is so much of earth that we have not explored, how can we know for sure what there is or isn't?
(It means they're making loud shouts as they ask for ice cream.) "Clamor" comes from the same Latin root as some other words you already know: "exclaim" and "claim." ... "But the word 'clamor' doesn't add any meaning to the sentence from the story. Why didn't Poe just write, 'I replied to the yells'?"
hope that i helped :)
The "this" to which the poet refers in the final line is "the poet's art," which means that, as long as his poem exists, people will remember that person.
<h3>What is the poem about?</h3>
"Sonnet 18" by Shakespeare is a poem about a beautiful woman with whom the speaker seems to be in love. The speaker tells her that her existence and her beauty will always be remembered, that they will never fade.
What the speaker means is that, as long as that poem exists and people read it, they will remember that woman's life and beauty. She is being immortalized in the poem.
Thus, when the speaker says in the final line, "So long lives this and this gives life to thee," the word "this" means the poem, the art that will keep her memory alive.
With the information above in mind, we can choose option B as the correct answer.
Learn more about "Sonnet 18" here:
brainly.com/question/16934108
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→It wouldn't be A (Queen-) because of the dash.
→It wouldn't be B (There is no error in this sentence) because there's an error.
→It wouldn't be D (Is:) because you only use ":" when you're giving multiple things together.
→The answer is C (Queen;) because it's joining the sentences together. It's like having a comma in the sentence after "Queen."