<h2><em>C is the correct answer. Hide Behind a Bush. Now my question is... What in the hell kind of test are you taking where it asks you how to take a picture of someone without them knowing?</em></h2>
Metonymy
Personification
Simile
Paradox
Before we can decide which of the above literary devices Milton used in his poem, On His Being Arrived to the Age of Twenty-Three (1631), we must first understand all of our options.
First, let's consider metonymy. Metonymy means to substitute one word for another which has attributes associated with the overall idea being conveyed. For example, when we say, "He was fishing for information," the word "fishing" represents stealth and the idea of someone slyly collecting information by luring out what they want to know. Other examples of metonymy are, "She really hogged the microphone!" and, "The pen is mightier than the sword."
The second option, personification, is a technique whereby an author turns a thing or an idea into a person by giving it human qualities or personality traits. Things in nature are oftentimes personified in poetry and prose. Some good examples of personification are, "The sun smiled upon the fields," and "The angry ocean swallowed the ship whole."
<span>It is very interesting and controversial story, same as
personality and carrier of Sun Ra, themselves. Sun Ra was probably forced to
leave college because of financial problems and his growing sense of isolation,
but he claimed that he had a vision in which the aliens talked to him and told
him to leave college and to play music, because that is his mission. He
explained that, in this vision, he found him self on the planet that he
recognized as Saturn, and that aliens told him that the world is going into
complete chaos, and that he should speak through music and that the world will
hear. Sun Ra was an American jazz composer, bandleader, pianist and synthesizer
player, known for his experimental approach to the music and controversial personality.</span>