The answer is: Pyramus’s long speech slows the pace to prolong suspense.
In the excerpt from Ovid’s "Pyramus and Thisbe," Pyramus believes a lion or a wild animal has killed Thisbe, because she has left her veil under a mulberry tree. As a consequence, he delivers a long speech which extends the progress of tension of the scene. Eventually, he stabs himself with his sword before Thisbe comes back and finds him dead.
Your answer would be choice B,it offers a counterclaim to the first stanza, which is then rejected in the third stanza. I only know this because I just had this questionif we are talking about the same question.
Antagonists are always the villian/mean character of a book
Answer:similie
Explanation:
it is a comparison using like.. cannot be personification because it is not given a human characteristic