Question
Which statement best describes how the setting in stanza 4 impacts the meaning of the poem? (1 point)
Responses
The speaker does not want to pause at the "house," suggesting the setting frightens her and she is eager to move on.
The speaker does not want to pause at the "house," suggesting the setting frightens her and she is eager to move on.
The speaker describes her tomb as a "house" showing she views her body's final resting place as one of comfort rather than fear.
The speaker describes her tomb as a "house" showing she views her body's final resting place as one of comfort rather than fear.
The speaker describes her grave as a "house," suggesting she needs shelter from death, contributing to her desperate and scared tone.
The speaker describes her grave as a "house," suggesting she needs shelter from death, contributing to her desperate and scared tone.
The speaker's final "house" or tomb has collapsed into the earth, contributing to the poem's theme that human li
Responses
The speaker does not want to pause at the "house," suggesting the setting frightens her and she is eager to move on.
The speaker does not want to pause at the "house," suggesting the setting frightens her and she is eager to move on.
The speaker describes her tomb as a "house" showing she views her body's final resting place as one of comfort rather than fear.
The speaker describes her tomb as a "house" showing she views her body's final resting place as one of comfort rather than fear.
The speaker describes her grave as a "house," suggesting she needs shelter from death, contributing to her desperate and scared tone.
The speaker describes her grave as a "house," suggesting she needs shelter from death, contributing to her desperate and scared tone.
The speaker's final "house" or tomb has collapsed into the earth, contributing to the poem's theme that human li
Answers
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Answered by
GPT-4o mini
In analyzing stanza 4, the statement that best describes how the setting impacts the meaning of the poem is:
**The speaker describes her tomb as a "house," showing she views her body's final resting place as one of comfort rather than fear.**
This interpretation suggests a contrasting perspective on death, where the use of the word "house" indicates a more familiar, potentially comforting association with her final resting place rather than one of fear or desperation. It reflects a more profound understanding of the setting as a place of rest rather than a point of terror.
**The speaker describes her tomb as a "house," showing she views her body's final resting place as one of comfort rather than fear.**
This interpretation suggests a contrasting perspective on death, where the use of the word "house" indicates a more familiar, potentially comforting association with her final resting place rather than one of fear or desperation. It reflects a more profound understanding of the setting as a place of rest rather than a point of terror.
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