An extended metaphor provides the overarching structure for the poem. The speaker begins by describing a spider that “stood isolated,” but that “launch'd forth” its threads to make its web over and over again. The poem's second stanza then establishes that the spider is a metaphor for the speaker's soul.
In the poem "Verses upon the Burning of the House," the poet asks god to promise the certainty of her salvation.
Answer:
A flock of sheep in Elizabethan England was more valuable than a modern house.
Transportation was difficult in Elizabethan England.
The food supply in Elizabethan England depended on what was grown locally.
Explanation:
Ian Mortimer's <em>The Time Traveler’s Guide to Elizabethan England</em> provides an insight into the daily lives of Elizabethan England. Through the use of diary entries, letters, and other writings of that time, he provides insight for modern-day people to see how the people of that era lived.
Explicitly stated details are those details that the writer mentions clearly in the text. The given passage from the book provides specific details on the food eaten during that time. He mentions how the food depends on what the season is, and how people consider a flock of sheep more valuable than a modern house. And another detail in the passage is the transportation system which was difficult at that time.
Thus, the correct answers are the second, third, and fourth options.
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