1st column: evolution 2nd column: to the conditions of their labor 3rd column: Plainly, this second species of Man was subterranean.
<span>There were three circumstances in particular </span>
<span>which made me think that its rare emergence </span>
above ground was the outcome of a long-continued
<span>underground habit. In the first place, </span>
<span>there was the bleached look common </span>
<span>in most animals that live largely </span>
<span>in the dark—the white fish of the Kentucky caves, for instance</span>
Answer:
The author shows that Harry West is determined to continue as a street seller by emphasizing that even after the Hackney council ceased to renew temporary licenses, West continues to sell the second-hand goods as a street seller.
Explanation:
"End of the road for London's traditional street markets? Meet the last stallholder in Hackney's 'Waste'" is an article written by Georginia Jarvis. The article talks about the last street-seller on Kingsland Road, East London.
Harry West is a 72-year-old man who is selling second-hand goods on Kingsland Road in east London for forty years. After the Hackney council ceased to renew the temporary license, many street sellers left but Harry West. He is determined to continue working as a street seller.
<em>"West is the only stallholder left on this once-buzzing strip, after Hackney council ceased the renewal of temporary licences – an act that has all but closed the market. It seems however that they did not bank on the staying power of 72-year-old West."</em>
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Answer:
C. Illustration paragraph