The overall tone of this passage is best described as observant and detailed. The author provides rich descriptions of the noise, motion, and environment of New York, capturing the chaos and intensity of the city life with vivid imagery and detailed observations.
Manhattan Tropics by Guillermo Cotto-Thorner Nueva York is the city of commotion and mobility. The noise can be so intense that it numbs the senses, and the person who lives in this environment for a long time loses the notion of silence. The torrent of pedestrians and vehicles is endless-streetcars, buses, automobiles, horse-carts, trucks, trains, bicycles, motorcycles, airplanes and wheelbarrows; fire engines, with their high powered motors and earsplitting sirens; the shouts of children and adults; the buzz of conversation of the human swarm on the sidewalks; guffaws, curses, cries; the explosion of a backfiring engine; wheels that bump over the rails and rend all tranquility; the spinning of propellers boring thunderously through space; noise, noise, NOISE: New York. Mankind has won a victory over the horizontal. New York aims overhead, is in perpetual pugilism with space. From the hard rock of Manhattan, man has shot up to conquer the clouds. Strapping buildings, as tall and long as the jíbaro's hope, dotted symmetrically with windows and bordered with a little aesthetic detail to silence the critics- austere, linear, devastating. In summer, they give the impression of macabre furnaces where eyelashes burn, bodies melt down and all feeling contorts and loses its sense.
Excerpt from "Manhattan Tropics" by Guillermo Cotto Thorner is being reprinted with permission from the publisher (@Arte Público Press - University of Houston) Use the passage to answer the question. Which best describes the overall tone of this passage? (1 point) formal and direct observant and detailed creative and imagin ative encouraging and optimistic
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