If you can name the plays And the sentence I could help 
 
        
             
        
        
        
He likes candy chicken omg you don’t know
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
In stave 1, when people asking for donations for the poor, Scrooge said that they should just send the people to workhouses and prisons if they are in debt. When the men said that some would rather die than go to workhouses and prisons, he said that they should just go and die and reduce the surplus population. He also refuses to come to his nephew's Christmas party, chases away a caroler boy, and abuses Bob Cratchit. Jacob Marley, who has been dead for like 7 years, comes to him, and says that 3 ghosts will come to him, in hopes that he will change becuase he doesn't want him to suffer the same fate that he himself did. however once ghosts come to him, he changes, and gives a large check to the donation men, raises Bob Cratchit's pay, and becomes a nice guy, showing that he did indeed change, because the Scrooge that was in stave one would never get near a check that has a word relating to charity on it.
Explanation:
I did not copy or paste, I just had to read the book and take a bunch of comprehenshion checks on it.
My deepest condolences that you have to read a book as boring as that.
I hope this helped you.
 
        
             
        
        
        
<h3>
Here's the answer: Araby</h3>
And now here's why, and the answer to another question:
This question is answered by this other question:
The narrator in <u><em>James Joyce’s “Araby”</em></u> dreams of romance before he visits the bazaar. Which statement best describes his feelings as he leaves the bazaar?
Thus the answer has to be "Araby" because the bazaar is only in this story.
This other question is asked in the same unit. These 2 questions answer each other:
Your question's answer: Araby
The other question's answer: The protagonist feels foolish because his romantic dreams have been shattered, but he still longs to feel the enchantment the bazaar once had for him.
 
        
        
        
Answer:
Character foils for Fahrenheit 451. Character Foils A lover of life and nature, Clarisse, an affable neighbor who is seventeen, is the foil of Mildred — Montag's cold, mindless, conforming wife. Delightfully human and aware of her surroundings, Clarisse disdains the fact-learning that passes for modern education.
Explanation: