The sun and it's hope is the answer.
The last one. It makes most sence instead of the first three.
Answer and Explanation:
President Abraham Lincoln delivered the speech now known as the "Gettysburg Address" in 1863, in a battlefield near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
<u>Lincoln says they are gathered there in order to dedicate "a portion of that field" to those who have sacrificed their lives in the war. However, immediately after saying that, his speech shifts, beginning by the word "but". This word indicates a change in path, so to speak, for his ideas to follow. He basically contradicts himself by now saying that it is impossible to consecrate that field, and he provides two reasons for that. First, the field has already been consecrated by the blood of those who lost their lives. Second, because the greater struggle is not over yet. The war was still raging, and so those who were alive had the duty to keep on fighting, so that the fallen soldiers wouldn't have lost their lives in vain.</u>
Browning developed the dramatic monologue because all of these: as a result of having rejected the subjective, because it permitted his characters to reveal their innermost thoughts, and because it permitted his characters to reveal their less admirable traits.
If <span>Jackson makes the prediction that Odysseus and Telemachus will take the suitors by surprise, I'd say that the detail that best supports his prediction is let no one hear.
If the suitors are to be taken by surprise, no one will hear about it.
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