What is ironic about this excerpt from "Poetry" by Marianne Moore? Reading it, however, with a perfect contempt for it, one discovers in it after all, a place for the genuine. A. The speaker does not change her view of always appreciating poetry. B. The speaker does not change her view of feeling disdain for poetry. C. The speaker says she enjoys poetry but then decides that there is no use for it. D. The speaker says she dislikes poetry but then makes an argument in favor of it.
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The correct answer is D. The speaker says that he does not like poetry, but then makes an argument in favor of it.The line begins with the speaker expressing his aversion to poetry. She says that she read it with "a perfect contempt for him." When she says she reads poetry with contempt, which means that she believes that poetry is under it. However, after expressing his aversion to poetry, then it becomes an argument in favor of it. She says she is in "a place for the genuine." This means that despite the fact that she is the poetry behind it, she does find out something real about it. The genuine nature of poetry is an argument in his favor.Therefore, the correct answer is
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Answer:D
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