The poet is talking about a dying father so i would figure the answer is C to interpret
<span>The question that might help you identify the theme of a piece of fiction is the question "How did the conflict(s) resolve, if at all?" This questions requires first thinking of the entire story as well as analyzing the plot and the overall message of the story to determine the conflict and resolution.</span>
In the excerpt of “Games at Twilight” by Anita Desai, the best line that suggests that the children have completely forgotten about Ravi is “They have quite forgotten him”. As the story goes on, the reader was let known that a lot of time has passed using the “Evening” and “Twilight”. From afternoon that they started to twilight could be along time for one round of hide and seek.
I would say the answer is 4
Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain) uses a fine humor style which is easily detected in extracts like:
<em>"Thish-yer Smiley had a mare; the boys called the fifteen minute nag(...) for all she was so slow and always had the asthma, or the distemper or the consumption, or something of that kind."</em>
<em>"...And he had a little small bull pup, that to look at him you´d think he warn´t worth a cent(...) his underjaw´d begin to stick out like the fo´castle of a steamboat..."</em>
<em>"...He ketched a frog one day, and took him home, and said he cal´klated to edercate him(...) and you bet you he did learn him, too.</em>
Twain is satirizing several aspects of American life, but specially the country "punks" who tend to speak at length about subjects that are close to them but are really unimportant an nonsensical.