Answer:
It's the first one
Explanation:
Answer:
a: People are vulnerable to the forces around them.
Explanation:
edg2020
For that which longer nurseth the disease,
Feeding on that which doth preserve the ill,
Th’uncertain sickly appetite to please.
My reason, the physician to my love,
Angry that his prescriptions are not kept,
Hath left me, and I, desperate, now approve
Desire is death, which physic did except.
The speaker compares his love to a disease that is an (epidemic) (uncontrolled) (difficult to detect) (carefully treated) . He goes on to say that even though love is destroying his (sanity) (well-being) (health) (wealth) , he continues to (love) (fantasize) (hallucinate) (waste away) . He uses (simile) (metaphor) (personification) (hyperbole) to portray reason, who, he says is angry at the speaker for not adopting its prescriptions. Thus reason has left him, and the poet agrees that the desire for love is equal to (death) (madness) (illness) (disease) .
uncontrolled
sanity
love
personification
death.
iambic
trochaic
Answer:
Trochaic
Explanation:
In poetry, an iamb is a metrical foot (a group of two or three syllables) that has one unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable (It can be exemplified with the sound daDUM). As for a trochee, it is a metrical foot consisting of one stressed syllable followed by an unstressed syllable (DUMda)
All four words are trochaic as each word has two syllables, with the first syllable being a stressed one, and the second being an unstressed syllable.
"an-swer", "foot-ball pla-yer" and "run-way"
Answer -D
Explanation:He is feeling depressed and feeling suicidal moods, so he decides to "jump" and light the 'candle" which is a symbol for death, but is also ironic because "light" often means happiness but in this case it is used as a double entantdre.