<span>D. Pathos</span>
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<span>Pathos is a literary device
that is used to garner emotions of pity, sorrow, anger, or other passionate
feelings to the point where readers/listeners/audience members are persuaded
into acting or thinking in a way the author/speaker wishes. Thus, it is a persuasive literary device. That said, let’s look at a few phrases
from the excerpt that employ pathos by manner of describing scenes of injustice
and cruelty:</span>
“He has plundered our seas…destroyed
the lives of our people.”
“…to complete the works of
death, desolation, and tyranny...”
“…scarcely paralleled in the
most barbarous ages…”
From these lines alone, it can
be seen how readers might be compelled to view the one being described in the
light the author does because the emotions that might be invoked by
descriptions provided.
1. they may want to keep someone's innocence or not burden another person by telling them the truth
2. they might be very competitive and hate seeing others be better than them, so they might continuously lie to their opponents
3. they could be a person who really wants to have a perfect image so they lie about their struggles
Answer:
The single story creates stereotypes, and the problem with stereotypes is not that they are untrue, but that they are incomplete. They make one story become the only story.
Explanation: