Answer:
The "it" Mr. White doesn't want in his home is his dead son, Herbert. Mr. White also tells his wife that when Herbert died, his body was so mangled that he was only able to know it was his son because of his clothing, so it's likely the corpse may not have even been fully intact.
Explanation:
Maybe bop or a jig?
both are dancing-ish and have to do with happiness
In "Pears", the first stanza describes how the speaker's aunties have swelled their lives, making a refuge for a child. Thus, in the second stanza we are told that the sweetest people the speaker knows are those who resemble pears, because of what he or she explained in the first stanza.
In "Hunger", stanzas from 1 to 3 describe the feeling of hunger and how to "cure it" with lots of food. In stanza number 4, the speaker is not feeling good after she or he ate a lot. Finally, the last stanza is the one that sums the poem meaning, telling us that hunger is suppressed by eating (stanzas 1-3) but do not eat too much or you will feel sick (stanza 4), thus summing up the meaning of the whole poem.
In both poems, the final stanza sums up the poem's meaning.
Answer: 3. He reacts in a socially appropriate way.
In this excerpt, we learn that Peter Ivanovich tends to react in socially appropriate ways to emotional situations. The author tells us that Peter Ivanovich knew "what the right thing to do was." He also tells us that the actions he took were intended to achieve a particular result. At no point in the story does it seem like Peter Ivanovich took a step out of emotion, or acted spontaneous in any way. Instead, he acted the way he believed was socially appropriate to act.