<span>The theme of "The Road Not Taken" deals with choice. The speaker is standing in a wood trying to figure out which road to take. He eventually takes the one "less travelled by," and speaks highly of his decision: "that has made all the difference."
As the poem progresses we find that there is no right or wrong choice in the speaker's mind. the paths are "as just as fair" as one another. Also, both "equally" are leaf covered. So it is not that he chose the right road, but that he "took" the road. Either road would've done just fine.</span>
Answer:
one challenge is that you must determine a theme base on how characters respond to challenges. If you don't understand the challenge or problem a character face you won't know the theme.
Irving's ending avoids the paradox of horror but denies the reader a sense of relief. What effect does the increase in suspense have on the mood?
It encourages the reader to keep reading
The rhetorical device which James Baldwin most clearly uses in this passage is B. Figurative language
<h3>What is Personification?</h3>
This refers to the figure of speech that gives human attributes to inanimate objects.
Hence, we can see that the rhetorical device being used by James Baldwin as he talked about the frozen blood thawing at the hearing of a particular sound is most likely personification because it gives the actions of the blood which is an inanimate object, human qualities.
Read more about personification here:
brainly.com/question/1013597
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