In the Poe's poem, the raven taps on the door of the speaker's chamber and the narrator opens the shutters and the raven came in, so that, the raven comes in through the window.
Open here I flung the shutter, when, with many a flirt and flutter,
In there stepped a stately Raven of the saintly days of yore;"
"The Raven" is a poem written by the American writer Edgar Allan Poe.
"The Raven" deals with an unnamed narrator on a dreary night in December who sits reading "forgotten lore" by a dying fire as a way to forget the death of his beloved Lenore.
A.
number
B.
amount
The correct answer is Adverb phrase.
The mural painting represents a message that also represents the kind of society and surrounding that Wehling find’s himself in.
Explanation:
In the short story, 2 B R 0 2 B, the author has created a utopia society where in there are no wars, no poverty, no disease; just happiness, openness and freedom. However, all good packages come with a caution.
Here the caution is that when a new life is about to come into the world, an existing person has to volunteer to give up his or her life in order to accommodate that life in the existing world, read USA, which has coined the policy that it now just sustain a certain amount of lives in the country so as to make it a fulfilling life.
As the story progresses, it creates a scene where in a 200-year-old painter is drawing a mural, depicting all the pioneers and doctors who support and also make sure this policy is being followed.
However, Wehling ends up killing the pioneer of the policy and a government officer, as well as himself in order to make place for his newborn triplets.
This depicts that as mural paintings are paintings that show ideal ideas and scenarios, maintaining the same becomes the irony for the people to follow the same.
The garden mural is a metaphor for the superficial and artificial nature of Wehling's society, hiding their problems beneath a facade of happiness.
The garden mural in the story is a metaphor for Wehling's society because it represents the superficial and artificial nature of their lives. Just like the elaborate mural that hides the ugly reality of the city, Wehling's society is characterized by a facade of happiness and contentment. However, beneath the surface, there are deep-seated issues and problems that are ignored and suppressed.
This metaphor is further reinforced by the fact that the mural is painted on a large concrete wall, symbolizing the rigid structure and conformity of the society. The mural essentially serves as a distraction from the harsh realities and acts as a means of escape from the truth.
Overall, the garden mural implies that Wehling's society is living in a state of delusion and denial, choosing to focus on superficial beauty instead of addressing the underlying problems.
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