Because all though he knows his sister is dead, he can still hear knocking and scratching sounds coming from her coffin. She's dead, but comes back to life to haunt him causing his madness to grow stronger.
The answer would be sections 2 and 3.
The author starts the poem conveying the beauty of nature and how it reminds him, at the same time, of the fleeting aspect of life. <u>In the second stanza, he develops a sort of calculation of his own mortality and how close he is to the end</u>. There's a strong irony here in how nature's grace and splendor serves to remind him of death. <u>In the third and final stanza, he concludes that he should carry on living with intensity every moment as an antidote for life's brevity.</u>
Hope this helps!
The government taking away every gun from every single owner is an unrealistic answer. The government can have a buyback program to get rid of guns, but cannot force to take away millions of guns.
I would say C because it is a prediction of what is going to happen and the fakir is telling them