Answer:
i would say the answer is 'probably'
:)
The sets of lines are: "And remember Beauty, Five-Wits, Strength, and Discretion/They all at the last do Everyman forsake" and "For after death amends may no man make,/For then mercy and pity doth him forsake."
The key word in finding this answer is "forsake," which means "abandon." The doctor is listing several abstract ideas (beauty, strength, etc.) that forsake or abandon him "in the end" and "after death." If all these traits are abandoning him, then we can infer that the doctor must go on this last journey alone.
Answer Simplicity
Explanation: Because they were easy
to understand
Answer:
D "they looked into his own with a meaning, a malign significance" (paragraph 4)
Explanation:
That would be the answer if the passage is from "The Man and The Snake"
In a good paragraph, all the sentences refer to the main idea of the paragraph. So if the topic sentence refers to the main idea of the paragraph, the remaining should too (false).