Metaphors are used almost as much as personification in this passage, as the entire second stanza compares the mirror to a lake, but even before that metaphors are distinctly present. The mirror calls itself “the eye of a little god,” by that point in the poem, Plath has made sure that it’s clear that the mirror is distinguished as completely objective, “unmisted by love or dislike” and “not cruel, only truthful.”
I would probably say "A"
Hope this helps.
<span>This is to persuade the gathering of people of the truth of the ghost that has showed up before Marcellus and Barnardo on two earlier evenings. He is the suspicious logician who does not trust in ghostly visions and unquestionably not in phantoms, and when he is persuaded that a heavenly being has appeared to him and his associates, the gathering of people is persuaded also.</span>