I believe it would be the second passage because an ellipse is used when a word, phrase or thought is left out but the reader still understands the intended meaning. In choice two, the narrator is speaking of school and making a point that he had never heard of a school for coloured people and restates it at the end that this was the first time he heard of it. It lets the reader imagine what must be going through his mind without stating it in the writing.
Out of all the choices, the second choice or B. Sestina seems most accurate.
It would be a sestina poem because both stanzas have six lines, and use six similar words at the end of the lines. (Shade, hills, grass, green, rock, and lady.)
It's definitely not a haiku, because haiku's are very short and consist of three lines. A ballad tells a story in short stanzas, these stanzas are not that short so it would not be a ballad either.
The allusion is the character has gone to a new place. A place beyond the rainbow.
Explanation:
- The movie is about a young girl who is sad and lonely and is transported to the land beyond the rainbow and throughout her journey, she meets new friends. She also defeats the evil witch of the west and she is rewarded.
- The other allusion is Dorothy throws a bucket of water on the wicked witch and destroys her. The wicked witch melts.
Allusions used in wizard of oz
The red brick road - the gold standard
Dorothy's slippers - free coinage of silver
The tin man - industry
cowardly lion - William Jennings Bryan
The lollipop guild - workers
scarecrow - farmers
Emerald city - Washington