Oh boy I’m gonna try or help as best as I can. After reading the poem I think that the imagery of freedom would be death. In the poem he consistently talks about how he could have died but didn’t. So I think that death would be freedom because it would end all of his struggling/ pain/ troubles. He constantly talks about how freedom (death) is so close in his grasp but he never quite makes it, he never dies. So I think he has a lack of freedom because although he could do what ever he wanted (for example jump in the river or take an elevator to the top floor) he never had the freedom he WANTED he never had the freedom to end life when he wanted to. And once he realized that he never had that freedom he decided that “life was fine”. I’m not sure if that makes sense but I hope it helps. If this confuses you then you should probably just wait till someone else answers
The three main purposes for writing are to persuade, inform, and entertain.
"Thomas à Becket" is the one monarch among the choices given in the question that was known as the "holy blissful martyr" whose shrine serves as the destination for Chaucer's pilgrims in The <span>Canterbury Tales. The correct option among all the options that are given in the question is the third option or option "C".</span>
What? Is there a question to answer here?