Answer:
this is an amazing story... what's the question. I'd be happy to answer it for you
This is not true.
Framing increases focus on what you want the viewer to focus on.
1. Giving the appearance of saying one thing while meaning something else is called <em>irony.
</em><em />2. A group of writers satirizing society is termed as <em>Scriblerus Club.
</em><em />3. The two rhyming lines of verse with five iambic feet is called the <em>heroic couplet.
</em><em />4. The giants with a wise king are called <em>Brobdingnagians.</em>
<em />5. The human beings controlled by cold is reason refers to <em>Houyhnhnms.</em><em /><em>
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Crown for king or steel for sword(soliders protected king) (connected to a thing. crown= king. kenning. a two word compound that takes the place of a simple noun (it can be used to create variation, and often uses synecdoche and metonymy).
Answer:
<em>1. "Though I have seen my head (grown slightly bald) brought in upon a platter,
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<em>I am no prophet—and here’s no great matter;"</em>
<em>2. "To say: “I am Lazarus, come from the dead,"</em>
Explanation:
T.S. Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" is a poem that deals with the themes of alienation, isolation amidst the tortured psyche of the modern man and his 'overconfidence' life. This modernism poem is from the speaker, Alfred Prufrock's perspective, delving into his love life and his need or desire to consummate his relationship with the lover.
An allusion is one literary device that writers use to provide details in their work. It makes reference to other pieces or works in this description. And two instances of biblical allusion are found in the lines <em>"I am no prophet"</em> and <em>"To say: To say: “I am Lazarus, come from the dead".</em> The first "prophet" allusion is about John the Baptist whose head was cut off and brought on a platter on the request of Herodias's daughter to Herod (Matthew 14, Mark 6). And the second allusion is to Lazarus, whom Jesus raised from the grave/ dead (John 11).