Answer: A *For question 1* sry only one I looked at...also noticed the other person had 2 answers so I narrowed this one down
Explanation:
B is not right because it only focuses on the mind game they were talking about(only mentioned once)
C is not right because it has not been proved that you <em>can't </em>travel through the center of the Earth
(I'm assuming you got D wrong but just in case) I think it's safe to say that answer choice D is only a sum up of paragraph 2. *Basically it doesn't sum up the whole passage*
He is death the person who takes a soul for the ones who have had there time named The reaper
The answer that best completes the statement above is the second option: the rejection of religion in favor of rationalism by some colonists. "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" is actually a sermon that was written by <span>Jonathan Edwards, a Christian theologian. This sermon was known during the Great Awakening and within this is a description of what hell truly looks like and that it exist in reality.</span>
<span>He uses a game that involves black and red ants to describe and question a very real war. Had he attacked the American Revolution up front as an irrational and wrong stance, the people of Concord would have become defensive and angry. In his comparison, he attempts to make the point that the ants are more heroic and suffer the loss of more lives than those who fought at the Battle of Concord. He showed truth that ants don't hire outsiders to fight their battles and therefore their battle is a far more important to them than it was to men of Bunker Hill. To an conclusion to Thoreau's purpose is that in reality human wars aren't any more sensible and hold no more logic than the wars of ants.</span>