You need B. an explanation of "how" the evidence supports the claim.
I had thus question my answer is The people go because they need their world saftey before domination. I think the book was called Chaucerline?
Answer:
D. Imagination can be more appealing than dealing with reality.
Explanation:
In <em>Anne of Green Gables, </em>Anne never used to really talk to Marilla and Mathew. She always was in her imagination, which was very appealing to her. When she came from the orphanage, she did not say anything to her foster mom and dad either. She was always in her imagination. The answer is D. Imagination can be more appealing than dealing with reality.
In "the open window" by Saki. The character Framton decides to go to the Stappletons' house to relax because he has been extremely nervous and believes the countryside will help him relax. Framton waits for Mrs.. Sappleton but Vera comes first and they start a conversation in which he discovers about the tragedy. This works as a contradiction to his expected outcome and actually makes him even more nervous.
The whole incident goes against what Framton expected, therefore is considered a situational irony.
The phrase in which that contradiction seems reflected from Framton Nuttel's perspective is: "She rattled on cheerfully about the shooting and the scarcity of birds, and the prospects for duck in the winter. To Framton it was all purely horrible."
The poem has a different understanding once you take into account she committed suicide soon after. In the poem she talk of being dead in the figurative sense and hiding it with smiles of accomplishment and illusions. Instead after you see she meant she was dead inside and when she talked of her feet saying we've gone to far she means she's tired of living. And again she talks of flowe petals closing as she closes in on herself.