The answer to this question is in Auden's words "for instance". His poem is not specifically about Icarus and his tragedy. It transcends this particular story, elevating its message to the highest, universal level. The poem is about suffering as an integral constituent of life. People are often completely unaware of other people's suffering. The Icarus motif is just an example, albeit a very drastic one. It serves as the poem's climax. The "delicate ship" is on its course and it keeps sailing, although the crew must have seen "a boy falling out of the sky". In other words, the strange death of a young boy changes nothing in the course of other people's lives. That is why, unlike Williams' poem, this one doesn't even have Icarus in its title, but the Museum. It deals with the relations of life vs. death and art vs. reality, rather than Icarus' tragic story.
You are correct. The answer is C. If you have a strong argument with facts to back up your speech, you will go a long way. Lack of emotion will definitely not help. You need to express what your idea is, in a way the audience understands. An angry tone will not convince them. You need to be serious, but not angry. Humor will not help because you need to get your point across. Jokes and laughing will not help. Your answer is C.
Answer: Hello, Your answer is C
Explanation: hopefully this helps
C! This way, she will feel useful and not useless towards her new life!
A "working title" is a title by which an author or a movie director
can refer to his work in progress, with the understanding that they
don't intend for that to be the title of the final product, and that
it'll definitely change before it goes out to the public.
That way, they don't have to keep calling it "the book I'm writing" or
"the movie I'm working on". Instead, they can talk about "Cover to Cover"
or "Thirty Frames a Second", even though those are crummy titles.