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English 13 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

Which conclusion can you draw from the passage? The narrator convinced both his parents to allow him to travel to Paris. The narrator would have to delay his travel to Paris. The narrator’s mother managed to convince him to cancel his travel plans. The narrator’s mother would travel with him to Paris. i turned from Mlle. Celeste's look of incredulous wonderment, and went off through the woods, with swifter strides than I usually took, to our chateau. Of course I dared not tell my parents my reason for wishing to go to Paris. It was enough, to my mother at least, that I should desire to go on any account. The best way in which I could put my resolution to them, which I did that very afternoon, on the terrace where I found them sitting, was thus: "I have been thinking how little I know of the world. It is true, you have taken me to Paris; but I was only a lad then, and what I saw was with a lad's eyes and under your guidance. I am now twenty-two, and many a man at that age has begun to make his own career. To be worthy of my years, of my breeding, of my name, I ought to know something of life from my own experience. So I have resolved, with your permission, my dear father and mother, to go to Paris and see what I may see."

OpenStudy (anonymous):

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