Answer: comedy
Explanation: anything with a happy ending is a comedy
It really depends on which poem you are referring to. If it's by Langston Hughes, then I'd say it's free verse.
Free verse means there are no rules here - the poet is not using any strict meter (pentameter, or such), and there are usually no rhymes. Since this is the case, ballad, lyric, and blank verse cannot be correct because they all have a strict poetic form to follow.
Answer: A.
to remind people about the evils surrounding them
Explanation: "Almost the whole world is locked in a deadly struggle, and, with the most terrible weapons which science can devise, the nations advance upon each other."
The title of Achebe’s Things Fall Apart is an allusion to a William Butler Yeats' poem.
<u>The title of the novel </u><u><em>Things Fall Apart</em></u><u> written by Chinua Achebe is an allusion to the poem "The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats</u>. In this poem, <u>the author writes "Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold" in the third line</u>. Moreover, both the poem and Achuba's novel present the idea of an important change. <em>Things Fall Apart</em> was published in 1958 and it focuses on the arrival of the Europeans to Nigeria during the last decades of the nineteenth century.
It seems that you have missed the necessary options to answer this question, but anyway, here is the answer. In line 791, Oedipus asks Jocasta, "And could we fetch him quickly back again?", Oedipus is referring here that he<span> wants to bring back Laius from the dead. Hope this answers your question.</span>