One thing interesting about the setting in the short story "Through the Tunnel" is that author Doris Lessing carefully uses word choices to show the striking contrast between the beach and the enticing rocky bay, and the contrast helps set the mood of the story and develop the major theme.
Answer:
The correct answer is option C: "unconventional style".
Explanation:
The poem "A narrow fellow in the grass" by Emily Dickinson focuses in the life of wild animals. Dickinson tells the story of a man that had an encounter with a snake when he was a child. The way the author describes the snake in the poem is by using an unconventional style since she does not follow any particular rhythm or form. This can be noticed since the first four lines of the poem: "A narrow fellow in the grass; Occasionally rides; You may have met him—did you not; His notice sudden is;..."
Answer:
I think the evidence that best supports the conclusion that the narrator is telling this story with a particular child in mind is the repetitive use of the second person, addressing directly to the reader.
In addition to this, the excerpt “But once a year all Pau Ammas must shake off their hard armor and be soft—to remind them of what the Eldest Magician could do” sounds like a recommendation or a duty of all Paul Ammas, that the narrator is telling the addressed person that he/she should fulfill as a Pau Ammas.
Explanation:
Answer:
the answer is correct it is C
Explanation: