If you’re talking about “The Importance of being Ernest,” it would be C. Her and Cecily are both under the delusion that anyone boy with the name Ernest will be honest as the name seems to suggest.
They think he's going to arrest Eliza
The figurative language used in the excerpt "The greater our knowledge increases, the greater our ignorance unfolds" is the <u>paradox</u>.
The paradox connects in the same situation two opposite things in a construct phrase that together acquires sense: although it seems more logical that when knowledge increases, ignorance reduces or fades away, the meaning of this sentence is that the more we know, the more we discover that yet we have much to learn; Then, the connection of the increasing knowledge with the unfolding ignorance makes sense.
<span>This is a perfect example of an archetypal quest. The main character is a hero has an important mission that brings him into a different world. In a quest, the hero is an ordinary fellow that the reader can relate to, but who has hidden strengths that make him ideally suited. It is usually stated or implied that he is fated to complete this quest. He fights against obstacles and there may be loss and tragedy along the way, but in the end, goodness and his cause always prevail.</span>
The answer is C :
He shows an intrestrest in her Chrysanthemums