The answer is B.<span>Where can I substitute?</span>
Answer:
d) the run-on sentence stretching from line to line helps achieve a suspenseful tone.
Explanation:
The use of diction and syntax in the Comprehension passage in consideration shows that the run-on sentence that stretches from line to line actually helps to achieve a suspenseful tone.
As the reader reads the speaker's speech in the passage, there is a kind of suspenseful tone that is seen. This makes the reader want to know more and keen to follow through with the speaker's ordeal in the prison.
"Who Understands Me but Me" is the passage that reveals a man's ordeal in prison.
<span>The answer is the letter (D) <span>
The destructive nature of the poem echoes Porphyria's limitless passion. </span>This explanation is based on the fact that Porfiria wanted to be with her lover forever and this fact is fulfilled in an alternative reality when she finds death in the hands of the man with whom she had desired eternal bliss, in that tragic moment it would seem that Porfiria does not show resistance and dies with a smile in his mouth, to reflect the immense love he had for his lover.<span> The poem by Robert Browning (Porphyria's Lover, 1842) is considered as a first approach of the author to the technique of dramatic monologue that he himself would contribute to develop and perfect.</span></span>