Answer:
Sacred and anxious.
Explanation:
As Young Goodman Brown made his journey from home, he took a desolate road which was covered with the gloomiest trees of the forest. He was alone and he feared that something bad could happen to him.
When he met the old man with grave and decent clothes, he got scared and anxious to see him in the lonely woods. He couldn't even reply without a tremor in his voice when the old man asked him a question. This indicates that Young Goodman Brown was scared and anxious when he met the old man.
Answer:
They indicate that he doesn't love her and that he doesn't really want to marry her, but that marriage is convenient and beneficial to him in some way.
Explanation:
Anton states that Natalya is an excellent woman to marry, she has everything he admires, but if he has time to think about this marriage, he will never marry her, because if he stops to think, he will see that she is not the true love that he desires, even though she has many qualities. It shows that he doesn't want to marry her, he would like to marry for love, but Natalya is convenient for him.
The correct answer is B.
By writing the text on first person, Daly provides information about the narrator's thoughts and feelings that would, otherwise, be unknown for the reader.
Because of the text being in the first person, the reader can know how important and magical the night with the boy had been for the narrator, and how hopeful she was that he would call her. And eventually, how disappointed she was that he never did.