I think the answer would be C.Characterization because the author is describing the character
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<span>Two weeks later, Dr. Jekyll gives a small dinner party, for which, we gather, he is well known, for the narrator refers to it as being "one of his pleasant dinners." Five or six of Dr. Jekyll's old cronies are invited, and among them is Mr. Utterson. As usual, the food is superb, the wine good, and Utterson manages to be the last guest to leave.</span>
Answer:
picture is not clear bro.
Explanation:
Answer:
C Jim doesn’t face consequences and never reforms
Explanation:
This is shown throughout the whole story. The author describes bad events that usually happen to the other boys or they reform after realizing they were wrong, but then the author goes on to explain how that’s not the case for this story.
In this poem, Pound is comparing "faces in the crowd" to petals that are laying against a tree branch.
This is exactly what he says in the poem - "petals on a wet, black bough." A bough is the main branch of a tree, so this is definitely the only appropriate answer in this case. He wants to say that people resemble these petals.