Answer:
This scene develops plot of the story because:-
Option D: This scene introduces the reader to the narrator and to the Duvitches.
Explanation:
"The Strangers That Came To Town" by "Ambrose Flack" is a story of the Duvitch family.
People of Syringa Street do not treat Duvitches nicely. They consider them as untouchables and avoid them. The whole town looks down upon them and have a prejudice about them.Towards the end of the story, residents start accepting Duvitches as regular residents and understand their truth. They welcome them with respect.
In the given lines, Duvitches are introduced in the story as they came in the truck and how people looked at them strangely with mixed emotions. So, statement D is the most apt.
3. dreamlike tone in the poem
If the literature involves romanticism, tragic story lines and drama, then it is in the slow paced writing situations. If the story lines involve actions and adventures, then it is in the fast paced writing situations. The pace of the situations will affect the reader on how they will interpret the story line.
Answer:
The author creates suspense by providing possible scenarios of what may happen. The narrator examines the room in great detail, and the reader gets a sense that something can happen at any moment. The room becomes quiet and dark and, even as he goes to sleep, the narrator is convinced something will happen. Instead of immediately telling readers what happens when the narrator wakes up, the author provides ambiguous details. “I stretched out my hand to find out what was the nature of this object. I felt a face, a nose, and whiskers which made me jump straight out of the soaked sheets, and rush in my nightshirt into the corridor, the door of which I found open.” Finally, the narrator shares that he actually caused the whole incident to happen.
Explanation:
Answer:
D
<em>The narrator describes their love with images of pain and death to imply that their love is doomed to end in tragedy.</em>
Explanation:
This was part of the reason why the King tried to kill them later even though they escaped.