The correct answer here is the second option.
This happens during the Scene 12 as Faustus and some of his scholar friends enter. One of the asks Faustus if he could possibly show them Helen of Troy who they agreed is the most "admirablest lady". Because of that request Faust asks Mephastophilis to bring her which he does.
In "Persepolis" by Marjane Satrapi, the narrator compares the wait for her father to come home to "the same silence as before a storm" because:
The silence before a storm is broken by awful thunders and heavy rain. Similarly, the silence in her home as she, her mother, and her grandmother waited for her father to return could be broken by awful news.
- "Persepolis" is a graphic novel by Marjane Satrapi based on her life experiences as child in Iran during the revolution.
- In the story, the narrator is also just a child. Her father has left home to take pictures of the demonstrators out in the streets.
- Taking photos was forbidden, and her father had been arrested before.
- The family was now afraid something worse might happen to him.
- They waited for him in complete silence. The narrator compares that situation to the silence before a storm.
- It is that calm moment before something terrible happens.
- With the storm, it is the heavy rain and the thunders. With the family, it could be the bad news of the father's death.
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General Zaroff and Sanger Rainsford are in direct, man versus man strife when they chase each other. Zaroff and Ivan are additionally in direct clash with every one of the mariners who have "unintentionally" wrecked on the island. Ivan and Rainsford likewise have an immediate clash.