Answer:
A because it shows how he ordered his men to help him directly, and he didn't just share something invaluable with him
Nixon's purpose was when he created the Vietnamization Policy, and Kennedy's purpose was when he created the Peace Corps.
A would be your best answer, it explains more and makes more sence.
Ginsberg most likely makes this allusion to García Lorca to show his respect for Lorca for being an unconventional poet.
Ginsberg admired Lorca and mentioned him in his poem. Lorca was killed in the Spanish Civil War by the right wing Nationalists because he had leftist ideas as well as Ginsberg did. Ginsberg and Lorca admired Walt Whitman. The latter wrote <em>Ode to Walt Whitman</em>. They were both, Lorca and Whitman unconventional poets who disregarded poetical rules and structures, and praised free expression of thoughts and feelings. Lorca and Whitman, both promoted sexual freedom through veiled references in their poems.
According to the Steward, Captain Keeney refuses to turn back because he is determined to get more oil first. Mrs. Keeney, as described in the stage directions when she first appears is nervous, unhappy, and submissive. Mrs. Keeney admits to her husband that she expected to enjoy the voyage, but instead she feels like a prisoner. Mrs. Keeney sees that her husband is a hard man who can be brutal toward his crew in pursuit of his goal. Keeney's pride pushes him to put his goal of getting the oil ahead of any feelings for his wife. He needs to get the oil to feel strong and to prove himself. At the same time, he denies that his wife is really going mad because he can't believe she is actually losing her mind and because she insisted on making the voyage in the first place.