She greets Harry warmly, and then stormily chastises her boys, setting them to work de-gnoming the garden.
        
             
        
        
        
In "The Soul Selects her own Society", Dickinson's childhood can be categorized as (A) exclusionary. 
The narrator speaks about only letting one individual into her soul and shutting out everybody else. She points out that she won't even let in the loftiest individuals if it does not suit her. 
 
        
             
        
        
        
I really don't know if my answer is going to help you but . . . 
“Pretense” is a noun, and another form of the verb “pretend”. It is synonymous with “guise” “an act”, and can also refer to “a claim”, furthering its similarity to “pretend”. Pretense is the American spelling of the word, while pretence, with a “c”, is the British spelling. Here are some examples:
“He was hiding his anger under the pretense that everything was fine”
“She was not even making any pretence of hiding”
That is how you put "pretense" in a sentence . . . . . . 
hope this helps even tho I do not think this is the answer
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer: the answer is a 
Explanation:
the writer wants the reader to come to a common sense conclusion on his or her own explanation