<span>Peytons escape is a difficult one. Immediately as he hits the water the soldiers open fire on him and he must swim to evade being shot after surviving a hanging. The soldiers even bring in artillery to kill him but the current pulls him away. While in the water, nature becomes so alive and powerful he can hear the sounds, see tiny detail, and feel things like never before. He drives himself tirelessly through the day, forcing himself to make it home at all costs. He is so exhausted he believes he has fallen asleep while walking because suddenly he arrives in front of his home where his wife is waiting with open arms. As he is about to clasp her in his arms, the truth of the situation becomes apparent as there is a blow to the back of his neck. It is his rope snapping his neck as he was hanged, the escape was just a dream, not real at all. Peyton died in a noose, hung for burning the bridge.</span>
B and C, i’m not sure if theirs another one tho
Answer: The most likely meaning of Greek word 'auto' is 'by itself.'
Explanation:
Prefix 'auto' means <em>self-propelling</em> - something that can move on its own power. As seen in this passage, word 'automobile' stands for a vehicle that can move all by itself. Similarly, 'autopilot' means that an aircraft can move without any human involvement. Some other words that contain this prefix are <em>automotive, automatically, autofocus</em>, etc.
Answer:
It is indeed hyperbole and not personification. <u>this is because the poet is asking Time to take away all his woes and laying the weight of wings of kindness on it.</u>
Explanation:
<u>Hyperbole is when a simple act is laden with something blown out of proportion</u>. here, the simple passage of time is said by the poet to be responsible for taking away his problems through its kindness, when the time is passing irrespective of his woes and does nothing else but pass.
it would have been personification if the winged feet of time in the quotation given, did not speed because of kindness. <u>the human qualities are laid on time by the poet and are not presented as a foregone conclusio</u>n. hence, it is more accurate to see this as hyperbole.