The correct options are <span>A) everyday language and B) commonplace characters. As a modern realist, Ibsen's concern were ordinary people, the kind we meet each day, the kind we are. Hedda Gabler is just one of those many women who have wasted their lives in boring marriages, with partners they don't love, doing things they don't enjoy. There are no spectacular stage props - the action takes place in an absolutely ordinary setting. Language isn't grandiose and figurative because characters aren't that either.</span>
There are many critics sharing their ideas and opinions about Whitman's decision in using free verse to support his themes. They think that this is to create a unique style of writing that blends journalism with music, oratory, and other cultural influences to transform American poetry.
The plot is rather simple, two people who are married to other people fall in love with each other and want to be together but can't because of their respective marriages. The entire play is just one part, or one act, and it's a comical version of the commonly understood Arthurian characters and cliches.