C is the answer you are looking for. A common idea isn't a moral, the generalization is the Main Idea, but not quite the moral. The thought of the characters almost never have the moral in them. Therefore, C is your answer.
B.) 2: A load would be the best anwer
The book this passage comes from is "<span>Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall-Street" by Herman Melville. The passage is not shown, but after doing research, the passage is about how Bartleby is always alone and that his soul is suffering, but not his body. The theme that the author developed from this passage is bondage. </span>
the way a piece written, manner of expression.
<span>The correct answer is B. The speaker of "Rhapsody on a Windy Night" is a person wandering in the street late at night.
As the speaker makes his way home, he notices many things, such as street lamps, a woman, a cat in the gutter, and the moon. By the end of the poem, the speaker has made it back to his home and his bed.</span>