I think is b but I am not sure
I think that Everyman is now happy and ready to face the reckoning after he put on the garment of contrition.
He is happy that Good deeds is able to accompany him. With Good deeds as his companion and wearing true contrition, Everyman will be made worthy of his eternal glory.
They are asking if the existence of the mist in the story is meant to encourage us to disregard the difference between various types of memory and knowledge.
In the book, the mist is there to represent of forgetfulness. It settles on the ground AND in people’s minds too, and that makes them forget things they knew and things that happened recently.
present patrticiple i believe
Had to look for the missing details of this question and here is my answer.
This is actually an excerpt that was taken from "<span>The Grapes of Wrath", and the one that best describes the tone of this passage is that it is SYMPATHETIC. Hope this answers your question.</span>