I looked down at Mitchell and stopped, knowing that despite our understanding, he was itching for a fight with me. Now, I don’t know what possessed me in that moment to say the next thing I did. Maybe I was feeling guilty that because I was my daddy’s son, I could ride Ghost Wind. Maybe it was that, but it wasn’t out of fear I said what I said. I no longer was afraid of Mitchell. “You want to ride him?” I asked.
Mitchell took a step backward. It was obvious he hadn’t expected me to say that. “You know I can’t ride him,” he said. “Your white daddy’d kill me.”
“You want to ride him?” I asked again.
Mitchell looked at the stallion, then at me. “So, what if I do?”
—The Land,
Mildred D. Taylor
Use the drop-down menus to answer the questions.
What does Paul say likely motivates him to let Mitchell ride Ghost Wind?
Is Paul’s motivation intrinsic or extrinsic?
Answers
Answer:
Paul's experiences with Mitchell hint the inconvenience that Paul's biracial status will add to his life. Paul finds that his dark foil profoundly dislikes the benefit stood to Paul on account of the karma of his introduction to the world. Mitchell's demeanor toward Paul is mind boggling—he despises the young man's less demanding, progressively advantaged life, and Mitchell feels that since Paul is dark he ought to have an actual existence like his own.
Yet, in the meantime, Mitchell's resistant conduct toward Hammond and George shows that the genuine object of his scorn is the white arrangement of intensity, from which Hammond, George, and Paul advantage. He takes his disdain out on Paul simply because he can, since Paul is littler than he is and as per the present society, he is viewed as dark. Possibly, Mitchell detects what Paul does not: that at last, the world will regard him as a dark man and not as a white man. His consideration and savagery might be an endeavor to alarm Paul to the way that society won't long treat a kid with a dark mother as white
Explanation:
Answer:
he feels guilty because of his special treatment
intrinsic