In "A Wagner Matinee", Willa Cather emphasizes the (B) hardship and sacrifice as associated with the Nebraska frontier.
It shows that when Clark, a Bostonian takes his aunt to a Wagner symphony concert. At the end of it, the aunt starts crying and saying "I don't want to go, Clark. I don't want to go".
In <em>Ode to the West Wind</em> by Percy Bysshe Shelley, the author is celebrating the wind for its power and ability to carry up dead leaves and making them alive, asking the wind to lift him up as if he was the leaves so that he can be one with the wind. Taking this into consideration, we can conclude that your best answer for this question is option A.
Answer:
Because the nightingale is a bird that only sings at night, and the lark sings at the day. She wanted to believe that it was a nightingale because she knew that Romeo would leave in the next morning. To her, the departure of her lover is too much for her to bear, so she convinces herself that it is a nightingale to not face reality.