At evening it hath died away.
I would say this because the wind doesn't actually die.
The answer is
“A. The injustice of discrimination.”
The reason for this is that the dog is at old age, stinky and is about to die. And in the book Carlson believes his useless for that reason, and the dog was discriminated for it. The author expressed how society treats (or discriminate) people of old age, person with disabilities and minorities.
Answer: Indirect characterization
Explanation:
This is indirect characterization, because the excerpt does not explicitly say he was mad at his grandmother. Instead, it gives an implicit clue that he is via body language.
Http://horror.wikia.com/wiki/List_of_deaths_in_Child's_Play_series
This might help!