Answer:
The correct answer is A. "Fadeth" and "ruin'd."
Fadeth is just the old English way to write fade, and the verb to fade has a slightly negative connotation. If something fades, it disappears and you no longer have it. Similarly, ruin'd (which obviously stands for ruined), has a clearly negative connotation - meaning that something is destroyed.
So these two words give off the impression of a tone which is bad, sad, or gloomy, and therefore is the correct answer here.
Explanation:
Sad and gloomy. Words such as "expire," "death," and "ashes" give Shakespeare's "Sonnet 73" which kind of tone? Consumed with that which it was nourish'd by.
The narrator used foreshadowing on the imagery using the cats that add to the intrigue and curiosity of its readers. Laced with dragging narration and certainty, this creates a veil of suspense. The foreshadowing comes from the hanging of Pluto, the outline of the dead cat after the fire, and the outline of the gallows on the second black cat's fur, all of which mirrors the narrator's own execution on the gallows.
Answer:
For careers, find something you enjoy doing, for jobs, kind of the same thing, just find it worthful. If you meant advice about careers and jobs then here you go, I mean it's never to late to choose one, so if you're asking yourself what career or job you should get then take your time choosing.