Well nobody can answer this because we don’t have part A :/
The extract is from 'The Faith Cure Man'.
Explanation:
This story is about a poor mother who wanted to save her daughter who was sick. One day she called the faith doctor home. He asked her to give him a brown paper.
Martha did as he said. The faith doctor dampened it with water and laid it on her daughter's head, saying some prayer. He also placed some sheets on the child's palms and feet and fastened them.
Then he knelt before the child and prayed aloud. Martha was impressed and hoped her daughter would get well soon. The doctor asked her to dampen the brown paper and placed it on the child for a couple of days. Martha saw some improvement but in the end, it was in vain.
Pathos is all about emotion. Pathos are all about appealing to a person's emotions to make your point hit closer to home. For example, an article aimed at an audience of mothers may use pathos by telling a heartbreaking story of a mother and her child to convince the audience of something. Since the audience can relate to the story because they have children, the pathos is effective and they are more likely to sympathize with the point the author is trying to make. Pathos is sometimes more effective than other types of rhetoric because people are easily swayed by their emotions.