C I think I’m not sure sorry........
Answer:
Hi!
The answer to your question is option 3. The southern slaveholders claimed that the north benefited from slavery because they pointed out that the North’s textile industry depended on southern cotton.
Explanation:
As you may know, slaves in the south worked mainly on the cotton fields. Because harvesting cotton required a very large group of people, slaves were brought and the cotton industry skyrocketed. The south became rich for their cotton production and the north’s textile industry also benefited as they now had a bigger suppy of cotton to work with.
Because the industry was doing so well and people were making more money, the North defended slavery by showing how much the textile industry had benefited from the cotton harvested in the south by slaves. Since the textile industry depended entirely on the cotton harvested by slaves in the South, the North argued that the sudden end to the slave economy would a profound and killing economic impact since the cotton economy would collapse.
Answer: This is an excerpt from Sonnet 29, written by William Shakespeare.
Explanation:
<em>Sonnet 29</em> was written by William Shakespeare, as a part of The "Fair Youth" Sequence. The sequence contains poems in which the poet directly addresses a mysterious young man.
The poem is about the speaker's feelings of depression and sadness, which he overcomes by thinking about love. The speaker admits that he feels isolated and is convinced that he is "an outcast." He envies other people for their appearance, friends, skills and opportunities, which results in his dissatisfaction. However, when he thinks about the man whom he addresses in this poem, he feels better.