That would be the response
the answer is based on logic .
Answer:
The correct option is b: He uses imagery-based descriptions of the flowers that sprung up untended, and the New Yorkers’ reaction to them, creating a reflective tone
Explanation:
The correct option is b: He uses imagery-based descriptions of the flowers that sprung up untended, and the New Yorkers’ reaction to them, creating a reflective tone because the author is narrating literally how the New York’s park High Line started; to obtain and maintain the lector’s attention he links all the kind of flowers and plants that sprung up to the people's reaction to help him to imagine the scene, putting him, at the same time, as the level of the New Yorkers’ who lived that moment. We can see this narration mechanism in the second line, where all the flowers’ names are told: <em>“Wild crocuses, irises, evening primrose, asters, and Queen Anne’s lace”.</em>
<u>The first option, A. He uses metaphor to describe how an abandoned part of New York came to life</u>, is not operable because the author is not using any metaphor; in fact he is narrating an event that really happened; <u>C option: He uses simple language to describe the transformation of an abandoned rail yard to an oasis, creating an instructional tone</u> is not the correct one because he is not using simplistic language and we can see it, for example, in the mastery of writing that he has at the moment of linking the flowers’ species with the facts that happened; finally<u> D option: He uses fact-based descriptions of the abandoned New York railroad taken over by a variety of weed, creating a detached tone</u> isn't the correct one because the author is not incorporating facts like dates, people’s name or, who took the decision to make it a park, so it is hard to say that he used fact-based descriptions.
In the poem from Dylan Thomas, ''Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night,'' he is convincing and telling his father to fight away death. In the poem, Dylan wrote, ''dying of the light,'' quoting that he is referring to death. To accompany the situation and description of death he writes, ''Do not go gentle into that goof night.'' Throughout the poem Thomas is convincing the readers to deny death and fight it. The writer uses imagery to paint a vivid picture inside the readers head.
''The Charge Of The Light Brigade'' is a poem by Lord Tennyson, that tells a story to the readers. The story is abut how the Light brigade went to war. The writer uses terrifying description of the war and how the men died: <span> “Shattered and sundered. They rode back, but not, not the six hundred.” When reading the poem you receive a sense of anxiousness as the poem goes on to describe the war.
The Dylan Thomas poem says you should fight death, but Lord Tennyson's poem says you should somewhat accept it.
</span>Hope i helped!
<span>Having seen his share of bloody crimes scenes, the seasoned police detective did not blink when he saw the five dead bodies
I hope I helped! :)</span>