Option 1 -> The poet speaks of "whatever remains of Urdu" and talks about hunting it out and killing it, indicating he sees it as dying, not thriving.
Option 2 -> His passionate, angry outburst ("suddenly roared") and accusations show deep concern, not indifference.
Option 3 -> He accuses Deven of being sent "to destroy whatever remains of Urdu, hunt it out and kill it," revealing his belief that Urdu is under attack and being systematically eliminated.
Option 4 -> His anger at Deven for teaching Hindi shows he opposes Hindi's dominance, not supports it.
Hence, Option 3 -> The poet's words "destroy whatever remains of Urdu, hunt it out and kill it" and his accusation that Hindi teachers are "slaves" or "spies" working against Urdu clearly demonstrate his conviction that the language is being actively suppressed and pushed to the margins of society -> correct