<span>What is Lincoln’s point of view regarding the future of the country?
Lincoln views the future of the country as a country undivided and free from slavery.
Which statement from the excerpt shows his point of view?
</span><span>I believe this government cannot endure permanently half-slave and half-free.
</span><span>
Explain how the selected quote shows Lincoln’s point of view.
He predicts that the only way the country will 'endure' or survive is that everyone is free and there are no two opposing sides.
What is a historical idea or event that supports Lincoln’s point of view?
When the 13th Amendment of the Constitution was ratified, slavery was abolished and has stayed that way. Now, America still survives.</span>
Answer:
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Explanation:
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According to the passage mentioned, the phrase that does not show Irving's bias against the Great Plains is:
"has not been inaptly termed 'the great American Desert'".
<u>Explanation:</u>
Irving Washington talks about the massiveness and the daunting Great Plains.
He expresses its harshness to survive in it, and the monotony o the views it holds for acres and acres.
With all this, he does not shy away from calling it or linking it to America, calling it the great American desert.
This shows he agrees to the fact that it is indeed an American desert that holds massive plain grasslands and harsh conditions of survival.
D. She should have been taking better care of her plants.