The answer is Part B as that is the most descriptive.
<span>Keats used it in one instance, where he was criticising Coleridge, who, in the opinion of Keats, wrote his poetry in order to search for truth and as a result missed out on beauty and its elevating affects. </span>I hope my answer has come to your help. God bless and have a nice day ahead!
The quotation that shows foreshadowing is: “Nothing. . . . Leastways nothing worth hearing.”
To figure out how this is showing foreshadowing, we must first know what foreshadowing is. Foreshadowing is a method an author can use to indirectly hint about what will come later in the story. From experience reading, one can know that when a character is holding back information, there is often some foreshadowing at play. Since here the soldier seems to want to tell the old man more, but doesn't, that is a work of foreshadowing.