The speaker uses two similes to describe the bird's flight. What are they?
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Simile is present in the third stanza. This is a simile because compares the bird's eyes to beads. This is also personification because the beads are "frightened," and as we know, beads are inanimate objects and cannot be frightened. Another simile extends through the fourth and fifth stanzas.
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Simile is present in the third stanza. This is a simile because the narrator compares the bird's eyes to beads. This is also personification because the beads are “frightened,” and as we know, beads are inanimate objects and cannot be frightened
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