I would choose D.
reasoning:
A is ethos- convincing someone of their character
B is also ethos
C is pathos- appealing to emotions
D is logos, appealing with logic- with a fact
Answer with Explanation:
The audience sees Mr. Frank<em> looking weak</em>. This gives insight on the audience about his age, as it has been narrated,<u><em> "He is gentle, cultured European in his middle years.</em></u>" The audience also sees a cluttered and dusty place, which seems like<em> it was meant to be abandoned</em>, as it has been narrated<em>,</em><u><em> "The rooms are dusty, the curtains in rag</em></u><em>s; Chairs and tables are overturned." </em>Chairs and tables are normally overturned <em>when nobody is using them. </em>The audience also see Mr. Frank carrying a <em>"rucksack,"</em> which means he is going somewhere as it has been narrated ,<u><em>"As he starts back for his rucksack..."</em></u> His moving restlessly shows that he is sad. It is even reinforced when he broke down and cried when he saw<em> a woman's white glove</em> as it has been narrated <u><em>,"He breaks down, crying."</em></u> There must be something special about the white gloves that made him cry. The audience also sees Miep and this gives them a clue that she's young as it has been narrated that<u><em> "She is pregnant"</em></u> and she's seen to have a big belly.
In Persistence of Memory, time is represented by clocks and hourglass. The clocks appear as though they are made of rubber, or cloth, draped over other objects. They are flexible and can bend. Some suggest that Dali was influenced by the scientific discoveries of the day, particularly Einstein's theories in which time is flexible not static.
Writers do not have to view the passage of time as a static thing either. They can describe events in the present and then flashback to past events. They can in one sentence describe a year of time, or they can in minute detail discuss what is happening with each passing second. In other words, writers can control and bend time just as Dali has done.
Answer:
Exposition
Explanation:
In these lines, we see an example of exposition. Exposition is the part of a text in which the author presents background information that the reader needs to know before reading the story. Exposition, therefore, is the first section of a text. In this case, the background information that readers need to know is that the setting has recently experienced a very destructive war. The character can remember the period before the war, and how the city was transformed.