The correct answer is A) The AFL focused on organizing skilled workers.
The Knights of Labor was a labor federation founded in 1869, they demanded better work laws such as eight-hour day, ethic. It was never well organized and declined shortly after. At the start, they used secrecy similar to Masons. With their decline, the American Federation of Labor was created and they lost many members to the AFL.
The American Federation of Labor came to life with the decline of Knights of Labor. The AFL was a federation of labor unions, it was founded in 1886. It was more organized than the Knights of Labor. By the 1890s the AFL started to only admit skilled workers in craft unions and became mostly an organization of white men.
I think that it's an opinionated question. I think it means that a citizenshould have an education and be knowledgeable as well as be a respectful and <span>honorable person.</span>
Answer:
She does not trust Mr. Brympton.
Explanation:
Edith Wharton's gothic novel <em>The Lady Maid's Bell</em>, the story revolves around the life of a lady's maid named Hartley who came to work for the Brympton family. Employed at their country estate to look after Mrs. Brympton, Hartley tells the story of how the house seemed out of the ordinary and something weird about it too.
As given in the passage, Hartley narrates how her master Mr. Brympton's demeanor changed after she had suffered from typhoid. Her own words <em>"I was not the kind of morsel he was after"</em> show he's lost interest in her, which is something that she felt happy about. Her relief is seen in the line <em>"Typhoid had served me well enough in one way: it kept that kind of gentleman at arm’s-length",</em> meaning she is safe from most presumably the target of Mr. Brympton's advances. The change in her appearance after the typhoid led to the repulse from the master of the house. But this also shows the kind of man he must be, which the speaker feels grateful for, for he no longer seems to be interested in her. And this has led us to conclude that <u>she does not trust him.</u>