The correct answer is C.
These lines are an example of enjambment. We can tell this because the sentence does not end with the line of poetry but instead carries over to the next lines.
This is not example of a metaphor because the comparison uses the word "like." This selection, then, illustrates both enjambment and simile.
Answer:
This excerpt assists in resolving the plot by revealing Dr. Jekyll’s conflicts with nature that caused him to withdraw inside himself since from the start, it was talking about how he has degraded his own faults, which in this case, made him, him. At the end of it, he was driven to reflect deeply.
Explanation:
The answer to this question is:
<span>Shakespeare's comedies tend to end with a?
"Marriage"
Hoped This Helped
Your Welcome :)</span>
Answer:
An expectant father waits to learn the outcome of his wife’s labor and delivery. In his brief exchanges with another father-to-be the reader is apprised of Mr. Knechtmann’s history. He and his wife are holocaust survivors; their only prior child died in a displaced-person’s camp in Germany--and there is no one to carry on the proud family name if this infant is not healthy. A bored nurse comes to inform Heinz that he has a son and everyone is well.