The quick answer is A, I believe.
It is the closest thing to sarcasm in the poem. It is more of a wail that it is sarcasm. It bemoans the fact that you can easily fight people who are not as well equipped as you are to carry on a battle.
He doesn't mock their inability to fight back. The line that is sarcasm isn't mentioned. Laughter drowns out the pain and wailing.
The natives are doing the laughing. The British are.
The red and brown is more or less just a fact.
A is the closest thing you have to an answer.
"Although it was raining fairly hard the Team still played its best game ever. "
I think that could be the answer- but I'm not 100% sure :') hope this helped.
Answer:A/Happy
Because the mood is calm
<span>Adjective is a word that describes a noun or pronoun.In this sentence thereis one adjective "green". Adjectives usually come just before the noun. This is also the case in this sentence. Grass is the noun, and is described with the adjective "green".</span>
I think the implicit meanings of words in poetry show that not everything has to be spelled out in black and whites but such things as metaphors can be used, and symbols of things like a casket and death and irony to make light of serious things to point out the absurdity of situations. A metaphor could be like comparing life to a hockey game wherein one game is lost but with persistence, the next game can be won and also life can be like a tree in winter that it looks dead but actually it gives birth to beautiful blossoms in the spring for example.