Answer:
Dahl uses rhetorical devices such as facts.
The kind of poem reading that the lines above represent is literal reading. There are no figures of speech here, such as metaphors, personifications, etc. which is why it's not a symbolic, figurative, or analytical reading. There is nothing to analyze here - the lines just tell the story of an eagle searching for its prey - it can't get any more literal than that.
The answer is C.during the civil war
Well I'll just hit it kinda vaguely to hit it all at once. So imagine you do something nice for a person, like buy them a gift or a present, that will cause a fondness and a bond between that person and you, which in turn establishes a relationship. Pretty much, in order to cause a relationship, you have to establish a positive bond with the person or some kind of being. The effect of having a relationship would be something like a deeper trust in others, improvement of the same or other relationships, increased happiness and so on. (I'm just assuming that these are all positive relationships.) So, an example would be like, you see a nice girl/guy, you talk to them and become good friends which would result in establishing a relationship. After establishing a relationship, your relationship would become more intimate and you would become better friends, or maybe even become partners. You can even get a negative relationship by creating a negative relation, then as a result it would be a toxic relationship. The toxic relationship would then result in it being harmful.
Gulliver using his glasses as a shield in a military operation while the Blefuscudians shot arrows at Gulliver's face and neck in Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels. This situation described as an ironic situation because Gulliver did not defend his face and neck from the arrow<span>. He rather defends his eyes using the glasses.</span>