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Into the Wild
Jon Krakauer

“It’s comforting to know Chris was here,” Billie explains, “to know for certain that he spent time beside this river, that he stood on this patch of ground. So many places we’ve visited in the past three years—we’d wonder if possibly Chris had been there. It was terrible not knowing—not knowing anything at all.

“Many people have told me that they admire Chris for what he was trying to do. If he’d lived, I would agree with them. But he didn’t, and there’s no way to bring him back. You can’t fix it. Most things you can fix, but not that. I don’t know that you ever get over this kind of loss. The fact that Chris is gone is a sharp hurt I feel every single day. It’s really hard. Some days are better than others, but it’s going to be hard every day for the rest of my life.”

Abruptly, the quiet is shattered by the percussive racket of the helicopter, which spirals down from the clouds and lands in a patch of fireweed. We climb inside; the chopper shoulders into the sky and then hovers for a moment before banking steeply to the southeast. For a few minutes the roof of the bus remains visible among the stunted trees, a tiny white gleam in a wild green sea, growing smaller and smaller, and then it’s gone. (203)

This passage contains all of the following rhetorical devices EXCEPT
A. purple patch
B. repetition
C. metaphor
D. cacophony
E. apostrophe

Respuesta :

Answer: C. metaphor D. cacophony and E. apostrophe

Explanation: The entire excerpt is literally applicable - nothing is implied - so there are no metaphors. Cacophony is a combination of harsh sounding words that often require explosive delivery - none which is present in this passage. Lastly, apostrophe is a literary device used a speaker stops addressing one party in order to address a third party, such as an individual (present or not) or an inanimate object or abstract concept. In this passage, Billie only addresses one party.