The irony about the mother’s wishes D) The church will prove just as dangerous as the protest. Thus, option "D" is correct.
<h3>What is ironic about the mother’s wishes?</h3>
Irony is a statement or a situation which seems contradictory or different to what the audience is expecting. In the given stanzas from the poem “Ballad of Birmingham” by Dudley Randall we can see an example of irony in the mother wishes, because she doesn't want her child to go to the protest, because she thinks it will be dangerous, instead, she says he can go to the church, but the church will be just as dangerous as the protest.
Thus, option "D" is correct.
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the last words of your lines are shame, lust, blame, trust rhyme scheme is where you match up which words ending is similar to the another so since shame has the same sounding ending its is A and since lust and trust have the same type of ending it is B and if you find another one that similar to A you mark it A but if it doesn't match up with any of the other endings you write another letter such as C and so on
Answer: B. The setting.
Explanation: The setting of a story or a text is the place and time where the story takes place, it can also be the context of the story (political, historical, cultural, etc). In the given stanza from "Jabberwocky" by Lewis Carroll, he seems to be describing the setting of the story, because he is describing a place where the story is going to take place ("Twas brillig, and the slithy toves Did gyre and gimble in the wabe").
B. both reproduce
c. both employ some kind of metabolism