He creates a distinction between what he says and what he really means, and he causes the reader to distrust the narrator.
Is this a math question? lol i bet you'd find a better answer if you put it in the math section. Good luck :)
In "The Black Cat", by Edgar Allan Poe, the narrator's participation in the cat's death foreshadows
Foreshadow is a literary device, that consists of clues to suggest what is going to happen later in the story. In this short story, the narrator starts saying that he is about to be hanged the day after he wants to give a detailed description of the occurrences that led to his confinement. He himself is going to be hanged as punishment for his crimes, the same way in which he hanged Pluto, his first black cat.
A is possibly your best option, even as themes can be impacted by setting in many other ways......theme is the main and idea of the piece of literature and a theme can also symbolize a primary conflict.
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