Answer:
The evidence details how Gandhi saw a man who had been beaten and knew that the man could not leave.
Explanation:
Hello. You did not submit the text to which this question refers, which makes it impossible for this question to be answered. However, when searching for your question, I found another question exactly like yours, which featured an excerpt from the book "Sugar Changed the World," specifically, the excerpt that relates the time when Ghandi went to work as a lawyer in South Africa, where there were many Indians who were hired to work in the sugar cane fields.
During his stay in South Africa, Ghani was able to witness an Indian, who worked in these fields, with his clothes torn, his face bruised and his mouth bleeding, in addition to having broken teeth and crying a lot. This man had been violently beaten by his employer. Ghandi realizes how the workers are treated with violence and cannot do anything to protect themselves, as if they leave their jobs, they can be arrested and further mistreated.
The correct answer is this passage:
CHORUS God of Thebes, lead thou the round. Bacchus, shaker of the
ground! Let us end our revels here; Lo! Creon our new lord draws near,
Crowned by this strange chance, our king. What, I marvel, pondering? . .
.
Here the chorus says that they will "end the revels" which means: stop feeling happy, stop the festivities, become unhappy, because Creon is coming.
This shows that they have a negative attitude to him and perhaps fear him.
The sentence which uses quotation marks correctly is: "How are your classes?" asked Xavier. When using quotation marks with a question sentence, always include the question mark inside the quotation marks and a comma after the quoted sentence is no longer necessary.