I believe that your answer is the first option due to how late the crying is, and unlike in "The Tell-Tale Heart" where the heart is constant and represents the slow descent of madness, the cry of the cat only appears at the end.
The portion of the story where it shows the speaker's madness is actually his looking for and finding similarities in the second cat and wishing to kill it.
Hope this was helpful.
Answer:
they need to stay outa trouble because they live with their older brothers because there parents died.....Can i have brainliest
Explanation:
I think that C, that is, "they found the charge and trouble very great, and they had little or no crop it is not doubted", is your answer.
Understatement represents something as smaller or less intense than it reallly is, it presents it as less important. In sentence C, the speaker refers to a problem as a minor inconvinience "(...)trouble very great". Generarlly, we all know, that troubles are far from great. "They had little or no crop it is not doubted", you could change the focus and say that you have "some crop" instead of referring to the crop as being little.
<span>Hutchinson's charge of puritans living by a "covenant of works" was stressed in the covenant of grace, the idea that individuals could be saved only by God's grace in choosing them to be in the elect. This contrasted to the covenant of works (the belief that behavior can bring salvation).</span>