I believe it was because of the raw violence and just oddity that was seen in the book, back then it was not common to go see a movie that had so much killing, much less read a book where you get chosen and stoned to death. That age was a little more innocent. Hope this helps.
Yeats uses images of spirals and falcon to show how anarchy has invaded the world.
We can arrive at this answer because:
- The poem features a falcon that got caught in a spiral that grew and advanced through the world more and more.
- This prevented the falcon from following its path and getting lost from the falconer, without being able to get rid of the spiral.
- This spiral that grows and advances around the world represents anarchy and Yeats uses it to show how anarchy is addictive, difficult to escape, and devastating.
- The falcon represents human beings, who are trapped in anarchy, unable to follow their paths and contributing to its advancement and destruction.
With this, Yeats reinforces the idea that once humans are trapped in anarchy, it will be difficult to stop it.
This question is about the poem “The Second Coming.”
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<u>The mood of this passage is GLOOMY AND MELANCHOLY.</u>
The prevailing emotion or mood found in the excerpt is gloomy/melancholy. This is clear when we pay attention to the author's approach to the main character and the overall setting: the character wakes up in impenetrable "blackness", there's no sound but the wind in the "blackened trees", he stood on a "cold autistic dark", and so on and so forth. All the setting is filled with darkness, there is nothing that evokes to something cheerful or enjoyable and the character is pensive in the middle of all that.
The sentence which is the most objective is A. My mother taught Italian lessons at the community center.
It is a fact, therefore it is objective. The other sentences are somebody's opinions - stupid sisters, crazy Greek family, a real pain - these words show that it is someone's opinion, which is subjective, not objective.