C. Her dog.
Written in 1913, published in the Saturday Review, this satiric dark humoured poem written in a dialogue schema tell the story of a death lady who is asking who is digging on her grave, she thinks first of her loved ones, her enemies, but in the end is her dog, who actually turns out forgot that was the place where her corpse rested.
"Can you see enough to tell," He mused, "how far away the shore is?"
"Can you see enough to tell," he asked, "How far away the shore is?"
"can you see enough to tell," he asked, "how far away the shore is?"
The correct answer here is the first choice. A complete sentence must always start with a capital letter. The rest of the words can only be capitalized if those words are proper nouns. Proper nouns like a name of a person, i.e. Jenny, Romeo or Katherine, or it could also be a name of a company or a store like Walmart or Hollister. The rest of the choices (choices two to three) cannot be used since those sentences are considered as one sentence. You can only capitalize when you are starting another sentence.
a. rhyme
b. wit
c. foil
d. lyric