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2 votes
Read the excerpt.

Already with thee! tender is the night, …

I cannot see what flowers are at my feet,
Nor what soft incense hangs upon the boughs,
But, in embalmed darkness, guess each sweet
Wherewith the seasonable month endows
In which setting is the speaker of the poem imagining himself in these lines from Verses IV and V of “Ode to a Nightingale” by John Keats?


A)in a dark room
B)in the forest at night
C)in a dark cemetery
D)in a sunlit garden

User Cara
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2 Answers

6 votes
i think the answer is B even tho i don't read... i think he had a lover. and he' s out there in the forest, most likely. month likes dark places espically with good hiding spot. about flowers. he mention that he cant see what flowers ar his feet. means to say that- bare feet. month speaking to him about the beauty of poem. he might be thinking / enjoying the scene in his head.
User Alex H Hadik
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8.0k points
3 votes

Answer:

B)in the forest at night

Step-by-step explanation:

The text reveals many elements of nature, such as flowers and branches, showing that the letter A and letter C are wrong because the narrator is imagining a place where near nature. The narrator uses the phrase "in embalmed darkness" showing that he is in a dark place, so the letter D is also wrong. With this we can conclude that the correct answer is the letter B, because it shows a place with nature and dark that combines with the place that the narrator speaks in the text.

User Kmas
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