Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow. Answers to these questions should be based on the passage only.
An elder sister came from the town to visit a younger one. The elder one was married to a tradesman and the younger to a peasant. As the two drank tea and talked, the elder sister began to boast and to make much of her life in town - how she lived and went about in ease and comfort, dressed her children well, had nice things to eat and drink, and went skating, walking, and to the theatre.
The younger sister was vexed at this and retorted by running down the life of a tradesman's wife and exalting her own in the country.
"For my part, I would never care to exchange my life for yours. I grant you that ours is an uneventful existence; yet you, with all your fine living, must either do a very large trade or be ruined. You may be rich today, but tomorrow you may find yourself in the street. We have a better way in the country. The peasant may never be rich but he will always have enough."
'Enough !" retorted the elder sister. "Enough with nothing but your wretched pigs and cows! Enough with no fine dresses or company? Why, however hard your man may work, you have to live in mud and will die there - and your children after you."