Answer:
B. let readers know what happened next
Explanation:
This is the correct answer
What Hawthorne cares about, and it comes up constantly throughout the book, is the inheritance that accompanies the Pyncheons and lead them down to a bitter path: "weakness, defects, dark passions, the tendency to do the evil and the moral weaknesses that lead to crime pass from one generation to another".
<span>In the poem "Counting Small-boned Bodies" written by Robert Bly, Bly creates a sort of sympathy for his readers. A bit of innocence is shed on the readers as they learn what happens to the war victims. Their bodies sit there serving as nothing but a trophy for the world to commemorate the war. Bly states all the things that they could serve purposes for but none that which will happen.</span>