Answer:
Option a
Explanation:
Dr. King echoes a Biblical allusion from Psalms 30:5—“weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning”--when he says, "it came as a joyous daybreak to end the long night of their captivity,” meaning how like joyous daybreak was the moment when the dark night of slavery was over. (King).
The answer is B) it can motivate the events of a story.
I hope this helps :)
Answer and explanation:
<em>"So it was the hand that started it all... his hands had been infected, and soon it would be his arms...his hands were ravenous". </em>(Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, page 41).
This quote explains a part of the story in which Montag returns back to his home after another book-burning mission. But this one ended tragically because a woman set her house on fire. Before the woman commands herself on this decision, Montag takes a specific book with him. And is after he reads this book, that he starts his rebellion against the state. So that's why the book says that it would this hand (Montag's hand) that started it all.
This is most evidently a metaphor. The thing to keep in mind when analyzing literature/poetry is that if you see figurative language making comparisons/drawing parallels between two differing things--instances where the meaning is not literal such as how injustice is not really a fire and has no flames--it's a safe bet you'll have on your hands a metaphor.
To
follow him and his word, because it’s known that he is the path we shall follow, his way is the only path to the promised kingdom if we follow