The answer is D due to A and B being absolutely wrong. C is also the wrong usage of language when discussing an audience so D is your answer!
Kinda like how Gatsby is actually very lonely. He has all this money and he throws parties in hopes that his love, Daisy will come. Of course, one day she does.... but still...
Dover Beach: Beauty Hides Pain
Poet, Matthew Arnold, presents a very real theme of love in his poem, Dover Beach. Where he creates a scene of beauty among the sea and shores, mixed with night and moonlight, he also is presenting us with the underlying misery, which is easily over looked and disregarded. Arnold writes, really, of love and loss, and relates it to beauty with hidden misery.
The first stanza of the poem paints a picture for the reader of beautiful nighttime off the shores of England and France, where the water and the moonlight reflect each others beauty. The sea is calm tonight / The tide is full, the moon lies fair / Upon the straits; (1-3). But, as the poem goes on, Arnold reveals the same secret misery to the reader that the scene eventually reveals to the speaker. He talks of the surface beauty of the world that disguises what has happened in the past. This is Arnolds way of expressing to us that love is love because of all its beauty, happiness, and perfection. But, only certain loves are true, so in other words, like the world holds much sadness in its history, love as well becomes saddened or lost, or holds great potentials to be saddened or lost. on the French coast the light / Gleams and is gone; (3-4).
The French coast has a sadder history because of the French defeat in the battles, which Arnold writes of. The coast of England has the same sad essence because of the losses of life, but the English were not defeated, so, in turn, the cliffs of England stand, Glimmering and vast, out in the tranquil bay (4-5). Like the light on the French coast Gleams and is gone, so does love that ends. It shines and brightens peoples loves until it fades out. In the other situation, the shores of England maintain their brightness, glimmering forever over a calm bay. This is a love that never
Answer:
c. Both are social misfits.
Explanation:
The character of The Misfit in A Good Man Is Hard To Find is that of a social misfit criminal who happens to come in contact with the family of Grandmother after their accident in the woods. After his dialogue with grandmother about morality and Jesus, he ends up killing her and his two other men murder the rest of the family.
Amelia from The Ballad of the Sad Café is another social misfit who is described to be a giantess that behaves in an odd way and has cross eyes. Miss Amelia is also described as being uneasy around other people.