Respuesta :
The two sentences that justify the inference are-
- " It's the only life, Billy—the straight one"
- "After I get married I'm going to sell out and go West, where there won't be so much danger of having old scores brought up against me."
Why are these two sentences supposed to be the inference's justification?
- Jimmy has accepted that his previous life was not one that could be sustained, as evidenced by the first sentence. He understood that all he required in life was stability. Now, in the present, he knows that he is leading a sustainable and stable life, which is nothing like his previous way of life, and he appreciates this fact. He has left all of his previous chaos behind and started earning with honesty, opened a store for himself, is getting married to the one he truly loves and has earned the respect of the community.
- In the second sentence, it's evident that he has already made significant progress, repaired many things, and built a much better present and future for himself than he had in the past. Nonetheless, he is concerned that the shadows of his past will try to pursue him once more. So, after getting married, he decides to move to the west and start a new life without fear of being pulled back by his past in any case. He does not want his past to influence his present.
Learn more about “A Retrieved Reformation” by O. Henry, here-
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