Hello. Although you have presented the text you have not asked the question to which this text is associated. Therefore, I will explain to you what is happening in this text and I hope that this can help you to answer your question.
This text is an excerpt from the play "Julio Cesar" written by Shakespeare. This passage is spoken by Brutus when he feels indignant that Cassius refused to lend him gold, so that he would be able to pay the members of his army. Brutus believes that Cassius is being selfish, as he has a lot of gold and lending a little would not be missed, especially to such a close friend. In this same excerpt, Brutus shows regret for having trusted Cassius' friendship and states that if the situation happened to the contrary he would never deny gold to a friend and would expect him to get gold through criminal or unethical practices such as exploiting peasants, such as Cassius told him to do it.
Answer: Never lie to anyone--it will only ruin your reputation.
Explanation:
Mark Twain in this excerpt is telling the youth not to lie because they would likely be caught and once caught, it would be very hard for people to completely trust them again because their reputation would be ruined.
The last sentence infers that the youth should not lie because they are not yet capable of telling good lies. One can take this to mean that Twain did not mind adults lying but other statements by him seem to support a stance that one should avoid lying completely.
Answer:
look below
Explanation:
raise awareness
encourage empathy
give individuals of less ability levels more positive feedback
I realize it's been 2 weeks since you have asked this question, but I am going to answer it for other people who don't know the answer. Hope you don't mind, but if you do have a complaint you can message me.
The Correct answer is false