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Part A

In "The Voyage of the James Caird," why does the author include this sentence about an

unrelated casualty at sea?

They would later learn that a 500-ton steamer had foundered with all hands in the same

hurricane they had just weathered. *

to help readers understand how remarkable the success of the voyage was 1

to explain what had happened to the ship the James Caird had left behind

to demonstrate that the size of a boat is unimportant in a storm

to add drama and suspense to her work of narrative nonfiction

User Shautieh
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1 Answer

1 vote

Answer:

to help readers understand how remarkable the success of the voyage was 1

Step-by-step explanation:

This is true because, it would help the reader to learn that, the same hurricane which they are complaining about, another steam boat weighing 500-ton just passed through the same hurricane successfully. That it weathered the hurricane, shows that, it was not affected by the hurricane.

User SpacePyro
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