Answer:
A. <em>tired, toils, poor
</em>
Explanation:
Your question is incomplete because you have not provided the answer option, which are:
The narrator is preoccupied by a desire to travel.
The narrator spends many hours traveling by train.
The narrator is frustrated by the noise of travelers.
The narrator has fond memories of her travels.
Answer:
The narrator is preoccupied by a desire to travel.
Explanation:
In the poem "Travel," by Edna St. Vincent Millay, the speaker expresses an intense yearning for traveling. In fact, she is so obsessed and absorted in her dreams and eagerness about traveling, that during the day she can hear the whistle of a train. Besides, at night she cannot sleep but sees the train's "ciders red on the sky" and hears the sound of a steaming engine. Thus, she has a fascination with traveling, since she would take any train and go anywhere, and she believes she would make the best of friends.
The structure of the story builds suspense by making the narrative into a quest.
Explanation:
The narrative uses well tested techniques of building suspense in On a mountain trail by Harry Perry.
The first example one can see is in the beginning when the author describes the particular difficulty of the quest for the top.
Thus starting medias res and then going back to give details.
The second example is that the narrator often employs descriptive passages just before a new development to draw out the moment.
This builds suspense even more in the text.