The answer to this question is definitely C.
If you sent this poem to a woman and meant it to be a compliment, you'd soon get your head handed to you. In pieces.
And yet many poems were written with the words coral, white (like fresh fallen snow), hair [a really touchy subject for any man to make a comment about]. breath -- it's wonder he didn't say anything about feet.
D is wrong. He doesn't want to show her in an uncomplimentary light. He wants poets to stop using cliches.
A is wrong. What beautiful things in nature? She is not as good as any that are mentioned.
B They are not positive qualities. Not in these lines.
He is presented as a loyal and heroic warrior who had no apparent lust for power. However, the flames of ambition could be seen when he uttered "tell me more" after the witches prophecy. The prophecy, however, is half finished and he is responsible for finishing it off himself. Thus, the main plot is set in motion and is a chilling foreshadowing of the influence of power and the corruption it has, even on a "good" person like Macbeth. Macbeth is seriously conflicted between a number of possibilities. He seriously considers letting fate take its course ("If chance would have me king, why then let chance crown me."), taking agressive action ("Prince of Cumberland! That is a step on which I must fall down or else o'erleap for in my way it lies."), and doing nothing and disregarding the prophecy ("We shall proceed no further in this business.") What drives him to commit the murder is not "vaulting ambition" but his fear that his wife will consider him less than manly.
Could you rephrase you question to create a clearer understanding .
B. He's good natured and possibly making a joke