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How do the speakers build up the poem's theme?

A. God's views are left for the reader to infer, just as humankind is left to infer His reasons for creating the universe and His plan for each human to reach salvation.

B. The narrator refers to God in the third person, thus not making Him the speaker, and speculates that God did not bestow the gift of "rest" because he wanted humankind to worship Him.

C. God as a speaker puts forth His view on why He withheld the treasure of "rest" so that humankind, having tired of the other material gifts, would turn to Him in their exhaustion.

D. The introduction of God as a speaker lends authenticity to the argument that God is manipulative because He wants to control humankind by withholding the gift of "rest."

How do the speakers build up the poem's theme? A. God's views are left for the reader-example-1

2 Answers

1 vote

Answer:

C. God as a speaker puts forth His view on why He withheld the treasure of "rest" so that humankind, having tired of the other material gifts, would turn to Him in their exhaustion.

Step-by-step explanation:

I took the test

User Labe
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6 votes

Answer:

I would say that it's C.

Explanation:

His views are made pretty clear, and he is a speaker because the dialogue is coming from him, he's not a narrator, but a speaker yes. D is a possibility but I don't know if they've already revealed the theme to you, so I would aswer

C to be safe...

User Sam Bunting
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4.3k points