Asked by jimmy

Read the passage from "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.”

Mrs. Flowers had known that I would be embarrassed and that was even worse. I picked up the groceries and went out to wait in the hot sunshine. It would be fitting if I got a sunstroke and died before they came outside. Just dropped dead on the slanting porch.

There was a little path beside the rocky road, and Mrs. Flowers walked in front swinging her arms and picking her way over the stones.

She said, without turning her head, to me, "I hear you're doing very good school work, Marguerite, but that it's all written. The teachers report that they have trouble getting you to talk in class." We passed the triangular farm on our left and the path widened to allow us to walk together. I hung back in the separate unasked and unanswerable questions.

"Come and walk along with me, Marguerite." I couldn't have refused even if I wanted to. She pronounced my name so nicely. Or more correctly, she spoke each word with such clarity that I was certain a foreigner who didn't understand English could have understood her.

Although Marguerite’s thoughts tell the reader directly that she was embarrassed, her actions let the reader infer that she was also
a:resentful
b:bored
c:interested
d:relaxed
is it a b c or d

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
c: interested

Explanation: Her actions—hesitating but staying close, unable to refuse Mrs. Flowers, and noting how nicely her name was spoken—show attraction/engagement rather than boredom, resentment, or relaxation.