I think it is D. The reader only gets one side of the conversation
Answer: In literature, an allusion is a figure of speech that refers to a famous person, place, or historical event—either directly or through implication.
Explanation:
<span>Throughout
history women are almost always perceived as the weaker sex, they are treated
unfairly without any logical reasoning aside from the fact that they are “inferior”
to men. </span>
“At
the Hearth” seeks to make people understand that women are not “less worthy”,
they are not inferior and in fact, times have changed in the traditional gender
roles in society.
Answer:
The tone of the poem changes along the lines "The teeming autumn, big with rich increases, bearing the wanton burden of the prime, like widow'd wombs after their lord's decease"
Explanation:
The poem has a tone of melancholy and sadness, but the lines "The teeming autumn, big with rich increases, bearing the wanton burden of the prime, like widow'd wombs after their lord's decease" cause a change of tone. This is because these lines talk about abundance, hope that provides a certain comfort to the reader, but quickly the tone returns to being melancholy, removing this comfort previously achieved.