The dialogue which is a good example of the author's use of dialogue to build suspense is, “You are rich, respected, admired, beloved; you are happy, as once I was. You are a man to be missed.”
Answer: Option B.
Explanation:
Many a times, authors make use of words or dialogue to create a suspense in the minds of readers, as in it makes a person curious or anxious to known about the uncertainty of what happened or might happen. The dialogue ‘You are rich, respected, admired, beloved; you are happy, as once I was. You are a man to be missed’ is taken from a short story ‘The Cask of Amontillado’ written by Edgar Poe. This dialogue builds suspense in a sense that the words ‘as once I was’ makes a reader anxious about what might have happened in a narrator’s life that he’s no more happy. The dialogue leaves space for uncertainty of the events that took place.
Answer:
Explanation:
He is being compared to Icarus, the man who had waxen wings and wanted to fly up to the sun, but his wings melted away and he didn't reach his goal.
Answer:
J. Verbal Irony
Explanation:
War is Kind is a poem by Steven Crane.
The poem begins with the speaker telling a maiden not to weep -
<em>Do not weep, maiden, for war is kind</em>
The technique used here is verbal irony.
Verbal Irony: This is a literary technique that occurs when a speaker says something that contrasts with what he means; his actions and emotions.
Verbal irony was used on the line above.
The speaker is very much aware of the brutality and unkind nature of war but still describes war as a kind phenomenon and tells the maiden not to weep.
Answer:
Because the gods wanted Antigone to complete the ritual, and so they gave here wind. Remember that this is told through the fates, so the gods must have had something to do with it. And through that, Creon´s decree was unjust so they had to do it.