<span>B. Ordinary language
Usually, languages of those times were dialect related to that region (for instance, if written by a Scottish poet, it would likely be written in the Scottish language)</span>
C) It makes nature seem invested in humanity, as opposed to being indifferent and random, which the speaker fears more than anything
Explanation:
<u>By personifying an element</u> in nature and putting it in the context of innocent love of a child <u>Edgar Allan Poe delves into the Romantic idea of a child being connected to nature</u> through his innocence and thus comes his ability to find amorous love for an element. The transference of love cliches on the dynamic accentuates this.
<u>Ultimately, the poem is about the synergy of humans with nature</u> that only children can understand and not the adults, and the dejected and desperate tone of the poem suggests the same: being afraid of losing this connection.
Its true the answer is a true
In response to the poem written by the shepherd to his love, the nymph is saying that his lovely idea of what life will be like together will quickly turn ugly.
The shepherd has promised his love all the beauty of nature...the waterfalls and flowers and glades and warmth of the sun, but the nymph reminds him that these things are fleeting and seasonal. Quickly the warmth of summer will be over, there will be no sheep in the fields and the meandering streams of summer will turn to cold raging rivers of winter and spring. Their love would be the same because it is based on his imagination and not reality.
Answer: I think it is letter C.
Explanation: YW!!!