Sometimes one reads a poem and believes that the poem expresses contradictory ideas, even if it is a great poem.
So it is wrong to think that the meaning of a poem is whatever the author intends to communicate to the reader by means of the poem. No one who is writing a great poem intends it to communicate contradictory ideas.
Which one of the following is an assumption on which the argument depends?
Second sentence is the conclusion.
Because no one who is writing a great poem intends it to communicate contradictory ideas, it is wrong to think that the meaning of a poem is whatever the author intends to communicate to the reader by means of the poem.
However, the key is the first sentence. SOMETIMES upon reading a poem, even if it great, one may find or believe that the poem expresses contradictory ideas.
Probable assumption:
- 'Sometimes' is enough to reach such a conclusion. But this is a lose one.
- May be that contradictory idea was as prevalent as it is now.
- Author has only one idea intended to communicate.
There might many but is what i think of as of now.(A)
Different readers will usually disagree about what the author of a particular poem intends to communicate by means of that poem. - WRONG. True in real world. No value here though.
(B) If someone writes a great poem, he or she intends the poem to
express one primary idea. - WRONG. Irrelevant.
(C)
Readers will not agree about the meaning of a poem if they do not agree about what the author of the poem intended the poem to mean. - WRONG. Agreeing among many readers is not concerned.
(D) Anyone reading a great poem
can discern every idea that the author intended to express in the poem. - WRONG. Bogus.
(E) If a reader believes that a poem expresses a particular idea, then that idea is part of the meaning of the poem. - CORRECT. Little philosophical but that's how the argument is in itself. If that idea is not part of the meaning then it is not true to conclude in such a manner.
Answer E.