The excerpt from "An Irish Airman Foresees His Death" reveals an acceptance of death, while the main idea in the excerpt from "Do not go gentle into the good night" is to fight death at all costs.
The following three lines indicate that all human beings are equal in the poet's eyes:
I am the poet of the woman the same as the man <em>(poet of both)</em>
And I say it is as great to be a woman as to be a man, (it is great to be both)
And I say there is nothing greater than the mother of men.
It is clear the use of comparisons of equality in the previous sentences from the poem of Walt Whitman.
The literary device used in the excerpt and the short story is theme, option A. Epiphany, a figure of speech in literature, indicates a moment of sudden revelation. Mrs. Mallard, the protagonist of this piece of work, realises the fact that freedom, in a society where the concept for a woman is almost impossible, can be within her grasp. Seeing the death of her husband as an advantageous way of leading a new possible life can be considered no less than a crime. The theme of freedom is present, despite the tragic means that carry it.
<span>It is letter B. The story appears as a report composed by an ex-understudy of the story's hero, Professor Arthur Barnhouse. Eighteen months previously the written work of the report the teacher builds up the capacity to influence physical articles and occasions through the power of his brain; he comes to call this power 'dynamopsychism', while the press embraces the term 'the Barnhouse impact'. At the point when Barnhouse wrongly informs the US administration of his freshly discovered capacities, they attempt to transform him into a weapon. </span>
1.To crouch or sit with bent knees- The cook squatted in the bottom...
2.To have a calming effect- "Oh, well," said the captain, soothing...
3.To get up or raise oneself- The captain, rearing cautiously...
4.To search or peer at thoroughly to locate something- But at last there came...