<span>3. Ivan Ilyich wanted to put him in the School of Law, but to spite him Praskovya Fedorovna entered him at the High School.
This is the sentence from the excerpt that suggests that Ivan Ilyich and his wife couldn't even agree on how to raise their children. </span>
A=Edgar Poe didn't write "just anything" that would sell. If he did that, we probably wouldn't have ever heard of him for several reasons which are ultimately unimporatant to this question.
B=He claimed his first love was poetry, and he considered himself a poet before a regular, ordinary writer, but given the way the choices are worded, I'd say that B is still, with this in consideration, not the answer.
C=Edgar Poe did fabricate his personal life one time, when he created a backstory for his alias Arthur Gordon Pym.
D=True, he did invent it before Sir Arthur Conan Doyle ripped off Poe's detective C. Auguste Dupin.
E=Edgar Allan Poe was never insane. He was not that kind of man. He was more philosophical and aristocratic. Although in his youth he had toyed with an alcohol vice, he overcame it in his later years. He is only (and falsely) known for an alcoholic past because after Poe died, Poe's editor, Rufus Griswald slandered Poe and re-wrote Poe's biography, altering history away from the truth. Edgar Poe was never the "madman-alcoholic" that some people wrongfully believe he was.
The indians from the mission cut the grains, separated it in sheath and placed it behind gramas house
Answer: He is referring to his discovery that the secret to a creative writing for him was using a method of word-association to write fiction.
Explanation: He would get up every morning and write down at his desk any string of words that would come to him. Then he would begin to develop a story from it.
He would take walks along familiar places and go down memory lane writing on acquintances and loved ones he once knew or that had passed on.