Crazy
The narrator directly describes the scene as being in the middle of "the madness of the carnival season". He describes everything as being loud, colorful, and happening in a crazy whirlwind around him. In the madness of this is when he meets Fortunato.
The correct answer is C. Dreary.
This is because Le Morte d'Arthur is full of melancholy inducing moments due to the fact that everything will fall apart at a certain point. Arthur's death, and his loss, is inevitable, so is the fall of Camelot, and of his Knights of the Round Table.
Answer:
a
Explanation:
a young boy selling sun glasses has a strange encounter