I already answered the question but here it is again:
The correct answer is B. to keep readers from realizing at the start that no humans are present.
Indeed, Bradbury’s story is intended to warn readers that the inevitable consequence of an all-out nuclear war is the extinction of the human race. His story is inspired by the much earlier poem from American poetess Sarah Teasdale, who wrote the poem of the same title in the aftermath of World War I, which until then had been the most devastating conflict in the history of the world at that time. Since the house is a mechanical entity; it stresses the fact that it was built by humans but since no humans are present anymore, their absence is all the more noticed and the, dramatic impact for readers is stronger and everlasting.
Capitulation : Surrender. <span>Cerebration... the act of thinking is to idea as...the act of surrendering (Capitulation) is to surrender.</span>
4-The neighbors will start to believe that Les Goodman is an alien.
At this point in the teleplay, The neighbors are starting to become paranoid. They don't understand why the power is acting so sporadically. The suggestions that have been offered as to the source of this strange occurrence had them believing in aliens. In the excerpt, the people are described as staring at Les Goodman's house and being "desperately frightened by it." These clues indicate that they are suspicious of Les Goodman, not trusting allies or happy for him.
Not Waving but Drowning Theme of Death. You'd think that there couldn't be a clearer distinction than the one between life and death, but "Not Waving but Drowning" goes out of its way to muddy the water, so to speak. The focus, after all, is a talking corpse who just won't shut up even though the living can't hear him.
By analyzing the structure of this poem, we can see that the poem is composed of six stanzas and thirty lines. Each stanza has a different number of lines, the poem has no rhymes and no punctuation.
The structure of a poem refers to how that poem is organized and how the reader can perceive it as soon as he observes it.
In "The African Pot" we can see a non-standardized and spontaneous structure and this is directly related to the message of the poem, since:
- The poem refers to the daily life of a small African village.
- The events that take place in the village are spontaneous and non-standard, as is the organization of the stanzas and lines of the poem.
- Everything that happens in the village is very simple, nothing is highlighted, as well as the lines of the poem that do not have punctuation or rhymes.
- Despite its simplicity, the village is an admirable place, as is the poem with its simple and tranquil structure.
Based on this, we can conclude that as soon as we look at the structure of the poem, we get the impression that the poet made no effort to present a standard and well-established structure, but soon after we realized that the poet made an effort to make the structure follow the narrative presented in the poem.
You can find more information about poem structure at the link below:
brainly.com/question/18517817?referrer=searchResults