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English, 07.01.2021 01:00 trentvw1174

PLEASE HELP Read the passage.

excerpt from "The Tyranny of Things"
by Elisabeth Morris

Two fifteen-year-old girls stood eyeing one another on first acquaintance. Finally one little girl said, “Which do you like best, people or things?” The other little girl said, “Things.” They were friends at once.

I suppose we all go through a phase when we like things best; and not only like them, but want to possess them under our hand. The passion for accumulation is upon us. We make “collections,” we fill our rooms, our walls, our tables, our desks, with things, things, things.

Many people never pass out of this phase. They never see a flower without wanting to pick it and put it in a vase, they never enjoy a book without wanting to own it, nor a picture without wanting to hang it on their walls. They keep photographs of all their friends and kodak albums of all the places they visit, they save all their theater programmes and dinner cards, they bring home all their alpenstocks. Their houses are filled with an undigested mass of things, like the terminal moraine where a glacier dumps at length everything it has picked up during its progress through the lands.

But to some of us a day comes when we begin to grow weary of things. We realize that we do not possess them; they possess us. Our books are a burden to us, our pictures have destroyed every restful wall-space, our china is a care, our photographs drive us mad, our programmes and alpenstocks fill us with loathing. We feel stifled with the sense of things, and our problem becomes, not how much we can accumulate, but how much we can do without. We send our books to the village library, and our pictures to the college settlement. Such things as we cannot give away, and have not the courage to destroy, we stack in the garret, where they lie huddled in dim and dusty heaps, removed from our sight, to be sure, yet still faintly importunate.

Then, as we breathe more freely in the clear space that we have made for ourselves, we grow aware that we must not relax our vigilance, or we shall be once more overwhelmed.

Question 1
Part A

What is the central idea of this passage?

Owning things brings one great satisfaction.

People who care about things lack maturity.

Having fewer things opens one's mind to experiences.

People are controlled by the things that they own.

Question 2
Part B

Which line from the passage best supports the answer in Part A?

"We realize that we do not possess them; they possess us."

"'Which do you like best, people or things?'"

"The passion for accumulation is upon us."

"I suppose we all go through a phase when we like things best; and not only like them, but want to possess them under our hand."

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PLEASE HELP Read the passage.

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