Answer:
Your answer is Option A
Explanation:
Based on the given poem, the narrator says that he hears the flute of the narrator from his room and it is very beautiful, when it is dark.
He further narrates that in the daytime when the neighbor plays the flute, he does not want to hear it because it is daylight and the neighbor is far and has a bald head so he runs away and looks for something else to occupy his time.
When night time approaches, when he bears the flute, he tries to remove the image of the fat, bald man and think of him as a young man and the music is sweet to his ears once again.
The contrast the narrator creates develops the theme of the poem by portraying the narrator's vanity by wanting the beauty of the music to match the image of the man (option A)
Hello. You did not inform the article to which this question refers, which makes it difficult for it to be answered accurately. However, I will help you in the best possible way.
It is right to make a decision when you feel the need to defend something you believe in, or when you need to change a situation. This must be done taking into account respect and calm, so that the positioning is effective. In this case, before taking a position it is necessary to analyze the whole situation, promoting the understanding of the points of view until it is necessary to choose one. This should not be done in a hurry and based on emotions, but based on reason.
C... It gives more vivid sensory details such as illuminating light which uses sight, and the crumpled letter which can also appeal to touch, and sight. while the others do not contain as many sensory details as C
Realism is a literary movement that was created in response
to romanticism. Romanticism had at its
basis—like the name suggests—a romantic (almost too optimistic) notion of all
about which was written. Realism, on
the other hand, was just the opposite in that it portrayed society (reality) as
the way it really was almost pessimistically (or at least as it was seen by the
author) and can be seen as an equal and opposite reaction to romanticism.