Answer:
D. A conversation with Arthur Radley to set the record straight.
Explanation:
There was a shy and reclusive neighbor whose name was Arthur Radley also known as Boo, whom the children picked an interest in and wanted to bring out of his shell during summer. Arthur Radley later proved helpful to the children after he killed Bob Ewell who wanted to kill Scout and Jem.
Atticus, the children's father was defending a black man known as Tom Robinson, and this sparked the hatred of Bob Ewell who wanted to harm the family.
Answer:
d
Explanation:
Because if you pick a, b, or c they are wrong.
I believe the correct answer is: The narrator's superior pigs and his demand that the villagers pay for the damage done to his pigs creates tension between the narrator and the villagers.
In this excerpt from the story “In a Native Village” from the “Ridan the Devil and the other stories”, written by Louis Becke, main conflict begins with narrator’s conviction that his pigs are superior and had done no wrong to other villagers when they escape from his property:
“Next morning the seven piglets were returned one by one by various native children. Each piglet had, according to their accounts, been in a separate garden, and done considerable damage… I gave each lying child a quarter-dollar.”
Their next escape resulted in losing their tails while confronting the other pigs, for with the narrator demanded a considerable payment as he regarded this as their escape from the “cruel death”. This situation cumulated the tension between the villagers and the narrator and resulted in their fraud and narrator shooting his own pig.
Therefore, I would say that the narrator advances the plot of the story with his demand that the villagers pay for the damage done to his superior pigs, which creates tension between the narrator and the villagers.
Are we supposed to answer or what lol?