The answer is:
B: Though the speakers in Okita’s poem and Cisneros’s short story have strong roots in foreign cultures, both of them feel more connected to their American identities.
The sons and daughters of immigrants grow up with a contradictory culture in their spirits, they grow up being form there, but also from here, this is what they try to portray that, they both try to make clear the conection and bond they share with their old cultures and with the country that gave them a nationality.
In <em>Ode to the West Wind</em> by Percy Bysshe Shelley, the author is celebrating the wind for its power and ability to carry up dead leaves and making them alive, asking the wind to lift him up as if he was the leaves so that he can be one with the wind. Taking this into consideration, we can conclude that your best answer for this question is option A.