Answer:
The correct answer is A. Huck doesn't seem to realize he is a rapscallion like the others.
Explanation:
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a book by American author Mark Twain, and it is considered as the second part of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. The widow referred to in the question is Douglas' widow, who cared about Tom and Huck.
Irony is a rhetorical devices that conveys a different meaning (sometimes the opposite) than the words expressed in the text. In the excerpt, we can see how Huck refers to "that gang" and "these rapscallions" as if he were not part of that group; however, since he used to help them, it is reasonable to consider him as part of the group, something he does not realize.
Answer:
D
Explanation:
This option certainly supports nature itself as an intelligent force by attributing knowledge of how to function to the life inside the body described in the passage. The life force is said to exert an influence on the body with certain skill that the excerpt describes as cunning.
Use of words with such a purpose usually refer to motivation and in the context of this passage gives an essential vitality to nature (life) keen enough to make decisiones and influence bodies.
As he converted into Christian beliefs, Augustine was heavily influenced by this philosophy of Plato. Augustine believed that evil was "a privation of good" and that God was not material. The philosophy emphasized on the supernatural entity of The One, or God.