During his boyhood, the main character in John Updike's "The Brown Chest" believes that the present is more powerful than the past. Which part of the excerpt supports this statement?
The entire front of the house had this neglected quality, with its guest bedroom where guests hardly ever stayed; it held a gray-painted bed with silver moons on the headboard and corner posts shaped at the top like mushrooms, and a little desk by the window where his mother sometimes, but not often, wrote letters and confided sentences to her diary in her tiny backslanting hand. If she had never done this, the room would have become haunted, even though it looked out on the busy street with its telephone wires and daytime swish of cars but the occasional scratch of her pen exerted just enough pressure to keep away the frightening shadows, the sad spirits from long ago, locked into events that couldn't change.

Respuesta :

The part of the excerpt that acts as a textual (or supporting) evidence to the initial statement is:

"...the occasional scratch of her pen exerted just enough pressure to keep away the frightening shadows, the sad spirits from long ago, locked into events that couldn't change."

What is textual evidence?

Textual evidence is the portion of a text that lends credence to the assertion that is being made by the author.

Thus, it is right to conclude that the above stated excerpt supports the initial statement because the writer uses a metaphor to describe the past.

The metaphor is: ", the sad spirits from long ago, locked into events that couldn't change.

Learn more about textual evidence at;

brainly.com/question/375033

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