The passage describes Marie as having a ”blithe personality,” which is synonymous with being lighthearted
Marie became ”disgruntled” when she learned that the university in Warsaw was closed to women, which corresponds to feeling annoyed
Marie defiantly left Poland to study in France, representing a challenge to the authority or norms that restricted her education.
Marie recalled their past joy together ”despondently,” which aligns with doing so dejectedly.
The passage indicates that Marie’s feeling of desolation, or wretchedness, began to fade when she was appointed as a physics professor.
Despite her fatal illness from exposure to radium, the passage notes that Marie Curie was never disillusioned or disappointed about her work.
“Why do they pull down and do away with crooked streets, I wonder, which are my delight, and hurt no man living? Every day the wealthier nations are pulling down one or another in their capitals and their great towns: they do not know why they do it; neither do I. It ought to be enough, surely, to drive the great broad ways which commerce needs and which are the life-channels of a modern city, without destroying all history and all the humanity in between: the islands of the past.” (From Hilaire Belloc’s “The Crooked Streets”)
Based only on the information provided in the above passage, which one of the following statements is true?