The correct answer is c. This allows extra time for whatever assignment or project you may be doing, big or small. If you only allow a very specific amount of time, you may misjudge.
These questions refers to the story "The Yellow Wallpaper."
In this story, we meet a woman who was diagnosed with an illness, and is prescribed absolute rest, including intellectual one. The story is told from the point of view of the woman herself, which allows us to witness the deterioration of her mental state first-hand.
At the beginning of the story, we see that the woman is quite a reliable narrator. However, as she begins to lose her mind, she becomes increasingly unreliable, making it impossible for the reader to know to what extent she should be trusted. Moreover, the woman is unable to escape from this situation due to the fact that her husband is a doctor, and he does not accept her opinions.
Finally, in terms of the room, we see that the narrator is in a room that has an ugly, yellow wallpaper. Besides this, she receives no mental stimulation, which leads her to become obsessed with the wallpaper as well as with the ideas of freedom and captivity.
C. A personal interview because you are talking directly to the person
In World War 2, you could help to hide Jews in a sort of sewer. The Government keeps tracks of most Jews, yet you could attempt to hide people, or at least give water, food, or a safe place. It may bring yourself to death back then, yet it would have a possibility to save at least some Jews.
While the poems were written centuries apart, they have many similarities. Both poems are sonnets that use comparisons but in an unusual way. Each tells what the love is not lovelier than. Both poems use imagery involving nature, and both use vivid word choice. While Millay does state her love is not more beautiful than "small white poppies," she "bend[s] before" him in awe. Shakespeare makes a point of stating that his love is an ordinary woman, not a goddess. Both poets use careful diction and poetic language. Shakespeare uses "hath," and inverts sentences. Millay uses "thy" and "thou" along with other archaic words. Her line, "lovelier than lilacs" is an example of her choosing words for their sound as much as their meaning. The lines "day by day unto his draught/of delicate poison adds him one drop more" also illustrates her concern for the sound of the poem. Love and lovers seem little changed over the centuries!