<em><u>Answer:</u></em>
1. English
Edmund Spenser is English. He varied the traditional Shakespearean English sonnet form by changing the rhyme scheme which creates couplet links that connect the quatrains together.
2. abab bcbc cdcd ee
Spenserian sonnets repeat the last rhyme as the first rhyme of the next quatrain. This continuation of a rhyme from quatrain to quatrain ties them together more than previous sonnet forms.
3. lasting love
The poet uses phrases like "endure for ever" and "naught but death can sever" to show how long love can last.
4. metaphor
He is comparing the burning oak to the patience it takes when wooing. He does not use like or as which would indicate a simile. Also, the oak is not being given human traits which is required for personification.
5. knot
He compares the depth of love to a knot so tightly tied and tangled that it cannot be undone.
Answer:
A ranger at the National Key Deer Refuge
Explanation:
The job of the ranger is to conserve the territory where the key Deer lives therefore he knows in detail what are the conservation programs and protocols that are in place to protect this specie.
forming two clauses and is illogical
Answer:
"For then each tyrant, by the hand of fate,
And standing troops, the bane of every state,
Forever spurn'd, shall be remov'd as far
As bright Hesperus from the polar star"
Explanation:
The four verses selected above represent how America was oppressed and exploited by the British. In these verses, the poem uses the term "tyranny" to represent the way America was governed before it became independent. The poet also shows how this type of positioning will no longer be tolerated, but rather rejected and fought, so that Americans never have to face tyranny again.