The right answer for the question that is being asked and shown above is that: "C. These lines are in the first person." A clue that these lines are in blank verse is that these lines are in the first person. I will not fail: 'tis twenty years till then. <span>I have forgot why I did call thee back.</span>
She use it because we need to express things if not our English language is kinda blah we use it to expand our sentences to make them a lot more interesting
Alice has experienced many odd things since falling down a rabbit hole and things continue to get weirder from there so it's only respectable that she's starting to think not everything is impossible. Even in this scene we experience another impossible thing; "n<span>ot much larger than a rat-hole: she knelt down and looked along the passage into the loveliest garden you ever saw...wander about among those beds of bright flowers and those cool fountains..." Notice how it says flower beds and fountains. If the door that led to this place was the size of a rat-hole what on earth could've gone through the hole and planted the garden and created a fountain? That is yet another impossible thought just from the passage. Alice has every right to think there must be a way to get inside, afterall, someone had to be inside to put everything there, right?
(Feel free to copy/paste this as your answer, I don't mind.)
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The answer is B "A young country boy" since how the story describes them living out in the grasslands.
Well credit is needed the grammar mistakes r wrong also so she should be taken off the newspaper if it haPpened more than once