Asked by k

ANALYZE CRAFT AND STRUCTURE —“Idea: Sonnet 1,” by Michael Drayton
Read the poem. Then, answer the question(s).

Like an adventurous seafarer am I,

Who hath some long and dangerous voyage been;

And called to tell of his discovery,

How far he sailed, what countries he had seen;

(5) Proceeding from the port whence he put forth,

Shews by his compass how his course he steered,

When East, when West, when South, and when by North,

As how the Pole, to every place was reared;

What capes he doubled, of what continent,

(10)The gulfs and straits that strangely he had past;

Where most becalmed, where with foul weather spent,

And on what rocks in peril to be cast:

Thus in my Love, Time calls me to relate

My tedious travels, and oft-varying fate.

Multiple Choice Question
Which lines from the poem use a slant rhyme? (When choosing your answer, assume that all words are pronounced following common American
A.
lines 2 and 4
B.
lines 13 and 14
C.
lines 6 and 8
D.
lines 10 and 12

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
A. lines 2 and 4

Explanation: In common American pronunciation "been" (/bɪn/) and "seen" (/siːn/) are not perfect rhymes, so they form a slant (near) rhyme. The other pairs (steered/reared, past/cast, relate/fate) are full rhymes.