1.A saturated meadow,

2.Sun-shaped and jewel-small,

3.A circle scarcely wider

4.Than the trees around were tall:

5.Where winds were quite excluded,

6.And the air was stifling sweet

7.With the breath of many flowers,

8.A temple of the heat.

9.There we bowed us in the burning,

10.As the sun's right worship is,

11.To pick where none could miss them

12.A thousand orchises;

13.For though the grass was scattered,

14.yet every second spear

15.Seemed tipped with wings of color,

16.That tinged the atmosphere.

What type of figurative language is found in lines 6 and 7?

Symbol.

Metaphor.

Personification. (MY ANSWER)

Simile.

Right

I think it is personification too!

good job!

iuunj

im ubanned

You are correct! The figurative language found in lines 6 and 7 is personification. Personification is the attribution of human qualities or characteristics to non-human entities or things. In this case, the air is described as "stifling sweet" with "the breath of many flowers," giving it human-like qualities and characteristics. Well done!