Read this section the poem "White-Eyes."
 I don't know the name of this bird,
 I only imagine his glittering beak
 tucked in a white wing
 while the clouds—
 which he has summoned
 from the north—
 which he has taught
 to be mild, and silent—
 thicken, and begin to fall
 into the world below
 like stars, or the feathers
 of some unimaginable bird
 How does the structure support the big idea in this section of the poem? Check all that apply.
 The lines seem to float on the page like a bird’s feathers.
 The stanzas seem to take the shape of bird wings.
 The lines in the first stanza start long and then get short, as if they are moving down.
 The stanzas seem to take the shape of a bird’s nest in a tree.
 The lines are spread all over the page like stars in the sky.