The correct answer is option A. The best analysis of the passage's symbolism is that the light represents Granny Weatherall's life. Written by Katherine Ann Porter in 1930, the play tells the story of a woman, Granny Weatherall, who is in denial of her character and life story, and who refuses to believe that her health is deteriorating. Granny also is fixated with a man that left her at the altar, although she refuses to accept so.
Granny starts to perceive a blue light, the one that is coming from Cornelia's lamp. But what this blue light represents is the life of Granny, as it starts to fade. At the end of the play, Granny begins to imagine how the pitch darkness of death is beginning to surround the blue light, her life, and consume it.
Not A because of Ave. not C because Sept, and D just sucks. B is your answer.
The correct answer is - He is uncertain about what will happen in the afterlife.
Hamlet's famous soliloquy <em>To be or not to be </em>deals with life and death - more specifically, with suicide. The protagonist is contemplating suicide because he realizes that living is futile when he is going to die nevertheless. However, he is interested in what happens after he dies.
He is uncertain about his future - maybe there is an afterlife, and maybe there isn't. In the end, he doesn't commit suicide but rather decides to take revenge on his uncle for killing his father.