That extreme kind of exaggeration in speech is the literary device known as hyperbole.
Answer:
Heathcliff
Explanation:
Heathcliff is the central character in the novel Wuthering Height. This evil character fetches readers' sympathy when he is brought as an orphan to Wuthering Heights by Mr. Earnshaw. Readers like the love between Heathcliff and Catherine which her brother doesn't like at all. As Mr. Ernshaw dies, the abuse of Heathcliff by Hindley begins. Albeit Catherine loves this man with 'black eyes', she succumbs to social tradition by marrying with Edgar Linton. Now Heathcliff is a heart-broken Byronic hero whom readers love to show sympathy. His humiliations and mysteries while Catherine was unmarried fetches lots of sympathy for him.
But then the marriage of Catherine reveals the evil in Heathcliff. He becomes cruel exhibiting a frustration due to his lost love mixed with his past abuses. By his sheer power, Heathcliff becomes the master of Wuthering Heights, successful in harassing Hindley and abuses Isabella.
The readers are shocked at Heathcliff's violent tempers, yet sympathize with him for his hapless childhood when he is tyrannized by Hindley. In power, Heathcliff wishes to pay his tormentors in the same way. We hate Heathcliff's violence but we sympathize with his traumatic condition.
A faction means that there is a number of citizens that the could be a minority or a majority but are relevant for what they think. The reason they are united is that they share common interests. There is a major purpose that made them gathered in the first place. And they can have differences with other groups, but all of them must be respected, knowing that beyond any particular interest, there should be just one: the nations best interest.
Federalist N.-10 is an essay that was written by James Madison as part of the Federalist Papers. He understood that there were factions as part of human nature and those factions formed alliances that sometimes worked against the public interest. So in this paper, he questions how to prevent those risks.