Respuesta :
The correct answer is C. “…to find the hot breath of the thing upon my face, and its vast weight—an incarnate Night-Mare that I had no power to shake off—incumbent eternally upon my heart!”
The first two excerpts tell us what the narrator wants to tell. But this one shows it, and that's the difference. He can't collect himself even as he recounts this event from the past. The cat is "an incarnate Night-Mare", "incumbent eternally upon my heart", which means that it represents his sense of guilt, it haunts him just like a guilt, much as he wants to suppress the feeling.
The first two excerpts tell us what the narrator wants to tell. But this one shows it, and that's the difference. He can't collect himself even as he recounts this event from the past. The cat is "an incarnate Night-Mare", "incumbent eternally upon my heart", which means that it represents his sense of guilt, it haunts him just like a guilt, much as he wants to suppress the feeling.
In this short story of Edgar Allan Poe, narrator blames a black cat which his wife brought home and how it became the point of view of all problems for him. When he unfolds the story, we observe that the problem is not the cat, but it is his mind. The correct answer is A.