The correct answer is option A. The best analysis of the passage's symbolism is that the light represents Granny Weatherall's life. Written by Katherine Ann Porter in 1930, the play tells the story of a woman, Granny Weatherall, who is in denial of her character and life story, and who refuses to believe that her health is deteriorating. Granny also is fixated with a man that left her at the altar, although she refuses to accept so.
Granny starts to perceive a blue light, the one that is coming from Cornelia's lamp. But what this blue light represents is the life of Granny, as it starts to fade. At the end of the play, Granny begins to imagine how the pitch darkness of death is beginning to surround the blue light, her life, and consume it.
Answer:
Primary
Explanation:
Primary because they are the target audience.
The message Hawthrone is trying to communicate about the veil by calling it a mysterious emblem represents sins that he cannot confess to anybody.
<h3>The Minister's Black Veil</h3>
- Mr. Hooper's black veil represents sins, darkness, and secrecy in Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Minister's Black Veil" in order to represent sins that he cannot confess to anybody, the darkness around his face and neighbors, and secrecy regarding the black veil.
- The black veil is a representation of human sin in many different forms used by Hawthorne.
- From the beginning of the novel until his death at the conclusion, the minister, Parson Hooper, wears the veil in the hopes that his congregation will understand why he is doing so, even though they never do.
- The lesson of "The Minister's Black Veil" is that people are estranged from those around them because of hidden misdeeds.
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Answer is D since it is very detailed, and explains the narrators thoughts of the future by using present tense, e.g. “At the thought of quitting...”, since it looks like the narrator is considering something they might be doing in the FUTURE.