I’m pretty sure it B not 100%
Earth how destructive the plants and living things. It grows and evolves, it dies and becomes a memory of what once was. The earth is green, but we turn it black. We do not appreciate the things that are, only the things that could be by our hand. We are selfish, we are only visitors yet we destroy the only home we know. What of that? What if we continue,and there is no more beauty to come. What of that? Will we then appreciate the things that are, will we stop our wicked ways. We don't take a moment and look often, we may have a glimpse, but we don't appreciate it. As our minds begin to forget what beauty this home we call earth has, we become bitter and nasty. How could we become such hate and lust filled people when the world is such a calm and beautiful place? How can we not notice what's right in front of us? What will become of us, when we forget completely about what our home has to offer?
Answer:
soliloquy
Explanation:
a speech in which an actor, usually alone on stage, speaks the inner thoughts of his/her character aloud.
The correct answer is C.
Characters and theme are related. However, the characters rarely state the theme directly. Instead, they illustrate the theme by their actions and growth. Their growth is generally the same as the theme -- the characters learn what the author wants the reader to learn.
<span>We camped out under a sapodilla tree and listened to the pygmy owls with their old women’s voices. I would say this sentence has something of magic realism in it that the pygmy owls have "old women's voices" in other words their hooting apparently sounds like or conjures up such a sound.
</span>