Asked by O

Breaking the word "Mustn't" between the "t"
and the "n"
A violates the poem's rhyme scheme
creates an example of onomatopoeia
C
highlights the poem's use of end-stopping
D
allows the poet to introduce two meanings with one word

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
D.

Breaking "mustn't" between the t and n yields "must" at the line end and "n't" at the start of the next line, letting the reader perceive both "must" and "mustn't." That creates a double meaning (a typographic/semantic pun) via enjambment. It is not onomatopoeia, doesn’t necessarily affect the rhyme scheme, and is the opposite of end-stopping (it uses enjambment).