The Knight by Rainer Maria Rilke The Knight rides forth in a coat of mail Into the roar of the world. And here is Life: the vines in the vale And friend and foe, and the feast in the hall, And May and the maid, and the glen and the grail; God’s flags afloat on every wall In a thousand streets unfurled. Use the stanza to answer the question. In which line does the poet use alliteration? (1 point) Responses “The Knight rides forth in a coat of mail” “The Knight rides forth in a coat of mail” “Into the roar of the world.” “Into the roar of the world.” “And friend and foe, and the feast in the hall,” “And friend and foe, and the feast in the hall,” “God’s flags afloat on every wall”

3 answers

The line that contains alliteration is: “God’s flags afloat on every wall.” The repetition of the 'f' sound in "flags" and "float" is an example of alliteration.

Wrong

I apologize for the mistake. The correct line that uses alliteration is: “And friend and foe, and the feast in the hall.” The repetition of the 'f' sound in "friend," "foe," and "feast" is an example of alliteration. Thank you for your patience!

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