If the options are metaphor, alliteration, allusion, and apostrophe, I believe the answer is metaphor, because the others don't fit.
Alliteration is the repetition of a consonant.
Allusion is reference to something or somebody outside of that literary work.
And apostrophe is the author speaking directly to somebody outside the poem, usually gods or a muse.
"Oh, dear, Donald or
<span> Robert or Willie</span>..." is the only line from this list that differs in intonation since it expresses surprise about something, where the others are more inquisitive.
Based on the reading, the correct answer to your question is D. H<span>e wants Mary to feel sorry for him.</span>
An adverbial phrase<span> is two or more words that act as an </span>adverb<span>. It can modify a verb, </span>adverb<span>, or adjective and can tell “how”, “where”, “why”, or “when.”
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