C I believe because it's the only one that makes sense to me
First, it signals the end of Bill and Mary's attempt at conversation, startling Mary into the present.
If the lights symbolize truth or revelation, then their sudden brightness represents the irrefutable passage of time and the impossibility of ever recovering or re-doing the past. That the lights run "the whole length of Fifth Avenue" further emphasizes the completeness of this truth; there is no way to escape the passage of time.
It's worth noting that the lights turn on right after Bill says, "You ought to see my kids" and grins. It's a surprisingly unguarded moment, and it's the only expression of genuine warmth in the story. It's possible that his and Mary's children might represent those lights, being the brilliant chains that link the past with an ever-hopeful future.
Answer:
vdbgcnhghgn
Explanation:
give me a complicated question i give you a complicated answer now translate what i said or how about you do it yourself?
Answer:
C. Machiavelli uses logical evidence to assert that it is acceptable for new princes to use cruelty.
Explanation:
Quote from Machiavelli: <em>"Nevertheless he ought to be slow to believe and to act, nor should he himself show fear, but proceed in a temperate manner with prudence and humanity, so that too much confidence may not make him incautious and too much distrust render him intolerable."</em>
All of this is objective and logical.