There are two possible answers.
The first one is B - because Hobbits have this culture or habit of not actually knowing themselves, thinking that they hate adventures and love staying in the same place for the rest of their lives. As it turns out, Bilbo loves adventures - but he wasn't aware of it, and actually tried to convince himself that he doesn't because he was raised to think that way.
D is also a possibility - because dwarves care about their gold and when they lost it, they had to get it back. The dwarves are known for being rich and keeping a lot of gold in their mines.
The theme of individualism
Transcendentalists believed that people are pure as individuals, but once they start letting society influence them, they can become corrupted. Emerson, in Self-Reliance, reinforces this thought and encourages people to be and guide themselves without letting society corrupt them.
I think the one that is clearly an example of a narrative poetry would be: <span>B. "And on her dulcimer, she played,/Singing of Mount Abora."
Narrative poetry mostly tells a fiction in the form of Poetry. We could distinguish it by spotting a name of a character or unique setting. In this case, </span><em>she played,/Singing of Mount Abora </em> is pretty much the phrases that gave it away.
The best events that foreshadow the ending for "A Rose for Emily" are:
1) When Homer Barron goes missing in the town.
2) When the strange odor starts to come out of Ms. Emily's house.
3) When Ms. Emily buys rat poison to deal with a "pest."
4) When the town says, "He has been heard to say he is not the marrying type."
it is the first one because its not real because it says "fairy"