The author maintains the pace to create peacefulness.
Answer:
B. Because his beloved's beauty is as transient as the morning dew.
Explanation:
In the given lines from <em>To His Coy Misstress,</em> the speaker compares his beloved's<em> youthful hue</em> (youthful skin) to <em>morning dew.</em>
Dew is water that we can see in the form of droplets on plants in the morning. It doesn't last long - it is usually gone by mid-morning, disappearing after the sun rises. This is why dew is often used as a symbol for youth and how transient it is. Human life is often compared to one day, with the morning symbolizing youth and the evening symbolizing old age. Youth is as impermanent as dew, and this is what the speaker wants to tell us about his beloved.
B) with the air released
B) “pumps out”
The word deflated in paragraph 6 is used to describe a balloon that has all of the air released. The author uses this comparison between the balloon and the bladderwort to help the reader better visualize what is happening. The first sentence describes the bladderwort as pumping out all of it's water. This way when a bug comes by and touches a hair in front of it's door, it can suck in a great deal of water, and with it the bug that is now it's meal.