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Question
question 7
1 pts
what dire offense from amorous causes springs?
○ and, spite of pride, in erring reasons spite, / one truth is clear, whatever is, is right.
○ my babe so beautiful! it thrills my heart / with tender gladness, thus to look at thee.
○ strange fits of passion have i known: / and i will dare to tell.
question 8
1 pts
which pair of lines contains an example of enjambment?
○ a grief without a pang, void, dark, and drear, / a stifled, drowsy unimpassioned grief...
○ dear god! the very houses seem asleep; / and all that mighty heart if lying still!
○ and doth with his eternal motion make / a sound like thunder - everlastingly.
Question 7
The question asks about a dire offense from amorous causes. The line "Strange fits of passion have I known: / And I will dare to tell" relates to amorous/passionate causes and the offense (fits of passion) that springs from them. The other options: the first is about a philosophical truth, the second is about a baby’s beauty, not an offense from amorous causes.
Enjambment is a poetic device where a sentence or phrase runs over from one line to the next without a pause. The line "And doth with his eternal motion make / A sound like thunder - everlastingly" has the thought continuing from the first line to the second without a natural pause at the end of the first line. The other options have a pause (end of a clause/thought) at the end of the first line. For example, the first option ends with "drear," and the next line starts a new description; the second ends with "asleep;" and the next line starts a new thought.
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C. Strange fits of passion have I known: / And I will dare to tell. (Assuming the third option is C; adjust identifier if needed, e.g., if options are A, B, C: C. Strange fits of passion have I known: / And I will dare to tell.)