The answer is option C, "inferred details"
Question: What is the passage
His good intentions and sincere desire to help the afflicted motivate him.
Unfortunately, Hale is also vulnerable. His zeal for discovering witchcraft allows others, particularly Abigail, to manipulate him. The amount of evidence for witchcraft when he arrives in Salem overwhelms him. Although Hale remains determined not to declare witchcraft unless he can prove it, the expectations of the people of Salem sweep him up, and, as a result, he takes their evidence at face value, rather than investigating it himself.
Answer: the author opinion on the topic
Explanation:
The excerpt that best describes the way growing up in poverty affected Lizabeth is
- A) “perhaps we had some dim notion of what we were, and how little chance we had of been anything else. Otherwise, why would we be so preoccupied with destruction?”
The excerpt above reveals how poverty negatively affected the children.
Even though they were vaguely aware of the depth of poverty they found themselves in, their preoccupation with destruction shows that poverty had made them expect little from life.
When a person sees no future before him, destruction might be the next resort. That was what happened to Lizabeth.
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