The correct option is D
Icarus was held with his father, Daedalus, on the island of Crete by the king of the island, called Minos. Daedalus decided to escape from the island, but since Minos controlled the land and sea, Daedalus went to work to make wings for him and his young son, Icarus. He bound feathers together by joining the central feathers with thread and with wax the lateral feathers, and he gave the whole the soft curvature of a bird's wings. Icarus sometimes rushed to pick up the feathers that the wind had taken away or softened the wax.
When the work was finally over, Daedalus flapped his wings and found himself climbing and hanging in the air. He then equipped his son in the same way, and taught him how to fly. When both were ready to fly, Daedalus warned Icarus not to fly too high because the heat of the sun would melt the wax, nor too low because the foam of the sea would wet the wings and could not fly.
They passed the islands of Samos, Delos, Paros, Lebintos and Calimna, and then the boy began to ascend. The hot sun softened the wax that held the feathers together and they took off. Icarus waved his arms, but there were not enough feathers to hold him in the air and he fell into the sea. His father cried and bitterly lamenting his arts, and, in his memory, called Icaria to the land near the place of the sea on which Icarus had fallen.
Daedalus arrived safely in Sicily, where he remained under the protection of King Cocalus. There he built a temple to Apollo where he hung his wings as an offering to the god.