Answer:
Lily is confident that Margaret can ride, but Mr. Connolly disagrees because she is a girl.
Explanation:
From the given passage from "Demon's Run", we can know from the conversation between the characters that Margaret will be the one <em>"who will race for a claim and then wait for the others"</em>. Mr. Connolly had presumed Benjamin will be the one, but rather, he was told that Margaret will be the runner.
When Mrs. Connolly exclaimed <em>"Margaret?"</em>, we can infer that she was surprised to hear it'll be a girl who'll be the runner. Mr. Connolly's implication that <em>"she can’t go riding out there with all those rough men"</em> implies that he too finds it shocking to hear of a girl racing among the men. With Lily's confident assurance of Margaret being <em>"the better rider"</em>, we can safely say that Lily's confidence in Margaret's ability is different from Mr. Connolly's belief that she can't as she's a girl.
Thus, the correct answer is the second option.
Answer:
"go to judgment, and from thence to execution; and the thoughts of these things make me cry"
"very carefully, said, Whither must I fly?"
Explanation:
I don't think there is really a good answer for this but here you go, in my opinion.
He's afraid that when he arrives at judgment day before God, that God will not let him into heaven and he'll be cast down to hell.
And he's willing to go wherever the Evangelist tells him to, even if its past that long hilly feild and hes not sure if he can even see the light,
bonus in case I'm getting this all wrong:
"Because I fear that this burden is
upon my back will sink me lower than the grave"
He fears that he'll go to hell whenever it is he dies with the burden that is on him at the moment (which I'm guessing is a metaphoraical thing)
It's B because Who fits in the sentence: <u>Who</u> made this beautiful sculpture because your asking which person made this.
Hope this helps! :)
1: listened
2: worked
3: grazing
4: taught
5: read
6: cut
I don't like the way this is worded. An allegory is a short type of poem. Not a genre. But the answer is D. If you look at general poetry structure, it tells a vivid story in a confined manner.