“Alfred Sewell ended his discussion of Chicago with a stirring prediction: ‘The city will nevertheless rise again, nay, is already rising, like the Phoenix, from her ashes. And she will, we believe, be a better city as well as a greater one, than she was before her disaster.’”
This is the best option because it gives the feeling of hope. The image of the Phoenix rising out of the ashes is meant to show that Chicago will once rise again. It will come back and be even better. The quote says that the city will "rise again" and "is already rising". Two of the other options only speak of the devastation of the fire. The option about the workers tells about the demand for laborers but it doesn't necessarily evoke a sense of hope in rebuilding.
Wrong place this is the mathematics section
Montag has to memorize Ecclesiastes and Revelation because they are the most symbolic books in the Bible in relation to this novel. Ecclesiastes is symbolic because its title means "to gather." Granger, Montag, and The Book People at the end must all gather. I hope my answer has come to your help. God bless and have a nice day ahead!
The literary device that the author used in the passage is hyperbole. A hyperbole is a figure of speech that uses extreme overstatement or exaggeration to have a humorous, ironic, or heightened dramatic effects.
Example: I am so hungry I could eat an elephant.
Sorry but there is no photo of a story attached, sorry for the inconvenience.