The right answer is the second option. Logan is expressing his opinion about Janie’s rejection feelings. Based on his speech and the conversation context, Logan seems to be a working class person, whose education may not seem enough for Janie’s parents or whole family’s standards. Also, his exclamation in the second part, when crying, it can be noticed that he implies to be upset with someone, in this case Janie. So more than hating her family, his feelings on her rejection due to his social status wins over. Just to add this fragment comes from the book The Assertive Woman in Zora Neale Hurston's Fiction, Folklore, and Drama by Pearlie Mae Fisher Peter, in which she relates the struggle of African American society and how wrong assumptions on social classes caused Logan and Janie relationship not to be acceptable at that time.
Ken looked in his backpack to find his camera but it wasn’t there, he walked back to the cafe to make sure that he didn’t keep it on the table, he entered the cafe and the camera was nowhere to find, he asked the waitress who served him if she took it but she said “you took it with you when you walked out” then he remembered that he went to a ice cream seller next to the beach that he walked past, He ran to the ice cream seller and asked him if he left it somewhere, the ice cream seller said “yes you took it out to take pictures of the ocean” then Ken remembered that he gave it to someone to take a picture of him next to a famous guy that was in the beach, Ken looked around and couldn’t find the guy who took the camera, ken thought to him self that when the guy took a picture of them together he ran with the camera and Ken did not notice it because he was surprised that he met a famous guy. He called the police to help him out with this situation and they asked him to remain calm while they find it around the area.
I believe you are referring to this text:
<span>In the eighteenth century Josiah Wedgwood had made some of the most expensive stoneware ceramics – in jasper and basalt – in Britain, but this tea set shows that by the 1840s, when Wedgwood produced it, the company was aiming at a much wider market. This is quite clearly mid-range pottery, simple earthenware of a sort that many quite modest British households were then able to afford. But the owners of this particular set must have had serious social aspirations, because all three pieces have been decorated with a drape of lacy hallmarked silver.
From the text, the descriptive detail that best aids the reader to visualize the central topic which is a specific early Victorian tea set is "</span><span>some of the most expensive stoneware</span>".
The passage lists a few things which would lend towards the idea of him being a monster. First, it says "god's anger bare he." referring, presumably, to the abrahamic god famous for his wrath, showing that Grendel was exhibiting intense rage. Second, it uses the sentence "The monster intended some one of earthmen in the hall-building grand to entrap and make way with" which, while a written a little backwards by today's grammar rules, says that he is planning to take hold of and kidnap some of the men in the hall, something only a monster could do.<span />