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Question 1
Which text evidence best supports the inference that Aunt Gold Teeth values wealth/status at the start of the story.
A. She ate little and prayed much. Her family being Hindu, and her husband being a pundit, she too was an orthodox Hindu. Of Hinduism she knew little apart from the ceremonies and the taboos, and this was enough for her.
B. She did, indeed, have gold teeth. She had sixteen of them. She had married early and she had married well, and shortly after her marriage she exchanged her perfectly sound teeth for gold ones, to announce to the world that her husband was a man of substance.
C. To be on the safe side, though, she used the insulin he prescribed, and, to be even safer, she consulted Ganesh Pundit, the masseur with mystic leanings, celebrated as a faith-healer.
D. The prayer-room, still heavy with the fumes of incense, presented an extraordinary sight.
Question 2
Which text evidence best supports the conclusion that Aunt Gold Teeth believes her interest in Christian practices or evil spirits caused his illness.
A. She was living at the time in a country village called Cunupia, in County Caroni. Here the Canadian Mission had long waged war against the Indian heathen, and saved many. But Gold Teeth stood firm.
B. She carried herself into the churchyard, awed by her own temerity, feeling like an explorer in a land of cannibals.
C. “I have done a great wrong, Baba.” “What sort of wrong?” he asked, and his tone indicated that Gold Teeth could do no wrong.
“I have prayed to Christian things.” And to Gold Teeth’s surprise, Ganesh chuckled benevolently. “And do you think God minds, daughter? There is only one God and different people pray to Him in different ways. It doesn’t matter how you pray, but God is pleased if you pray at all.” “So it is not because of me that my husband has fallen ill?”
D. I never knew her real name and it is quite likely that she did have one, though I never heard her called anything but Gold Teeth. She did, indeed, have gold teeth. She had sixteen of them. She had married early and she had married well, and shortly after her marriage she exchanged her perfectly sound teeth for gold ones, to announce to the world that her husband was a man of substance.
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