<p>The sonnet one was the answer it didn’t have rhyming couplets at the end? I think it is that since it did not have a pair of rhyming lines at the end.</p>
<p>How about the question about the slave Douglass narrative, where it asked if the piece was a social commentary which one would not be one of the points? I originally put something about circumstances but I changed it to people are inclined to be evil. I hope that’s right.</p>
<p>It’s definately not inclined to be evil. There’s nothing in the passage that suggests that. I don’t remember the right answer but it wasn’t that.</p>
<p>What about the one about the tone of the passage with the woman describing her dead husband? I put melancholy although another choice seemed reasonable.</p>
<p>Wait, yeah, the one that was posted wasn’t the one I don’t think because I remember putting “No rhyming couplets at the end”… I think the question was like “Why was this poem unusual?” or something. That’s not the poem with the sporadic rhyme scheme.</p>
<p>But while we’re on that poem, due to the iambic pentameter or whatnot, which words had to be pronounced as two syllables?</p>