thick, curly hair and woodland air
the title itself has natural imagery. Anything in the poem that compares to nature, or a image having to do with nature is natural imagery
He was good
bridal bed
you could describe their clothes or how they move. if it were pairs you might say how they work together. use your imagination
He was good
nothing
A speaker would use words like poured in to indicate that he has received many telegrams on the issue.
Very coarse and bestial imagery. "Your daughter and the Moor are now making the beast with two backs."
Elie Wiesel uses imagery such as "walking corpses" and "eyes that had already seen too much" to describe the prisoners in concentration camps. He also describes them as emaciated, haunted, and devoid of hope.
The speaker uses natural imagery to compare the young man's beauty to a summer's day, emphasizing his eternal and unchanging attractiveness. By referencing elements like the sun, winds, and flowers, the speaker highlights the young man's perfection and timelessness in a way that resonates with the natural world's beauty and constancy.
E.Attentive to detail and concerned Thanks To Me
The speaker describes his mood at the beginning of "The Raven" as "weary" and "dreary."