In "Young Goodman Brown" by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Young Goodman Brown is pious Christian man from the Salem village who agreed to meet with the Devil in the forest. He leaves his wife Faith behind, and claims he's running an errand. Goodman Brown intends to resist the Devil and return to his wife after the meeting, but the Devil intends to divert him away from God. “Let us walk on, nevertheless, reasoning as we go, and if I convince thee not, thou shalt turn back. We are but a little way in the forest, yet.”
Answer:it should be especially memorable
Explanation: if its the last paragraph, it needs to hold all the summarized information and thus be remembered
Answer: Fabio's attitude changed because he'd be in the parade.
Explanation: Fabio is excited to be able to participate in the parade. The focus of the question isn't on why he'd be in the parade or how? But on what makes his attitude change. Every other factor mentioned corroborates that he'd be participating in the parade.
The poem warns those who use flattery and attraction to disguise their true evil intentions.