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6 Devastated by her brother's death, the now-esteemed poet returned to her father's London residence

where she spent the next five years living in seclusion. Rarely taking visitors, Elizabeth's only solace was
found in her correspondences with artists, scholars, and friends. In these letters, she expressed her views on
a number of issues, including the ills of slavery, the rights of women, and the intolerable institution of child
Labor. Of slavery, she wrote to one friend, "How you look serenely at slavery, I cannot understand, and
distrust your power to explain."
Which of these BEST summarizes Elizabeth Barrett Browning's feelings about slavery?
A)
She believed that slavery was offensive.
B)
She knew that slavery was a necessary evil.
She believed that slavery helped many countries prosper.
D)
She knew that slavery allowed her to live a privileged life.

2 Answers

7 votes

Answer:

A

Step-by-step explanation:

User Sino
by
8.8k points
3 votes

Answer:

A

Step-by-step explanation:

B, C and D state a good side to slavery, which is fully against what Elizabeth is trying to say.

User Krish Wadhwana
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8.2k points