Answer:
The room was dark musty and the general aura of the room felt tragic. There was nobody in there. Just a man. One man, Muttering to himself nonsense. He seemed lost, just sitting there. There were strange assortments of unpleasant dolls and toys along with broken ritualistic things piled in a dirty old garbage can in the corner of the room. It was hard to see it. Yet so noticable. The mans eyes were sunken in and his mutterings told me he was in a dark place he couldn't get his mind out of. He looked up at me and his seemed to be begging me never to end up like him and to help him. I looked in the uncomfortable room once and decided I would ignore him. I probably should have helped the old man, but I didn't. I guess I was being ignorant...
Explanation:
I believe it is B as he used such soft words for the imagery as he imagined about him being older.
Macduff fulfills the witches' prophecy of not being "born of a woman", as he was delivered through a cesarean section. This is during the part of the novel where the witches are telling Macbeth to watch out for Macduff, but being a tragedy Macbeth is led to his own downfall and still makes contact with Macduff.
The key question I can think of is how are poetry and rhetoric similar to each other?
Feigned: The boy feigned a signature, and the boy didn't feel guilty for the feigned mark.
Impressionability: The young girl refused to believe that she was impressionable, and her ignorance of her said impressionability made her vulnerable to outside influences.
Hope this helped! (^ω^)