1.A 2.A 3.B 4.B 5.A 6.D 7.A 8.A 9.D 10.D 11.C 12.D 13.A 14.D
In the poem from Dylan Thomas, ''Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night,'' he is convincing and telling his father to fight away death. In the poem, Dylan wrote, ''dying of the light,'' quoting that he is referring to death. To accompany the situation and description of death he writes, ''Do not go gentle into that goof night.'' Throughout the poem Thomas is convincing the readers to deny death and fight it. The writer uses imagery to paint a vivid picture inside the readers head.
''The Charge Of The Light Brigade'' is a poem by Lord Tennyson, that tells a story to the readers. The story is abut how the Light brigade went to war. The writer uses terrifying description of the war and how the men died: <span> “Shattered and sundered. They rode back, but not, not the six hundred.” When reading the poem you receive a sense of anxiousness as the poem goes on to describe the war.
The Dylan Thomas poem says you should fight death, but Lord Tennyson's poem says you should somewhat accept it.
</span>Hope i helped!
Option D is correct. Most interpretations agree that in Metamorphosis, the Kafkaesque describes a situation of Gregor struggling with his family after the transformation. Gregor is the one carrying with his kafkaesque existence and learning how to put up with himself, but his family rejects him. After Gregor dies, his family feels relieved, rather than sad.
The best choice is option C. A conceit is an "extended metaphor" - meaning it is drawn out or lengthy, possibly even explored throughout the entire poem. Another characteristic of a conceit is that it is often a surprising unexpected comparison - for example, comparing two things that are not at all related - which may help the author of the poem to more effectively grab the reader's attention.
<span>An example of a conceit in poetry includes Shakespeare’s well-known sonnet, Sonnet 18, which begins “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?” Throughout the poem, the subject (the person the narrator is talking about) is compared to a summer's day, making this an extended metaphor.</span>