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What is the tone of This Living Hand by John Keats?

1 Answer

5 votes

Answer:

He is distraught, terrified really, and reaches out for contact. He is enraged and displays his hand to prove to you he exists—"see here it is." He converts the listener, the reader, from a formal "thou" to a more intimate "you." The sentence moves from the conditional future to the present tense.

Step-by-step explanation:

- Eijiro <3

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