Comprehension Passage

Directions: Read the passage given below and answer the questions that follow by choosing the correct/most appropriate options:

At length, it was decided that the guilty child must be taken to her mother, who was ill, and who ought to know what had happened. Helen begged, implored that she might be spared this further disgrace and that her mother might be spared the grief and pain of it; but this could not be: duty required this sacrifice, duty takes precedence of all things, nothing can relieve one from duty, with a responsibility no compromise is possible.
Helen still begged, and said the sin was her own, her mother had had no hand in it--why must she be made to suffer for it? But the aunts were stubborn in their righteousness and said the law that visited the sins of the parent upon the child was by all right and reason reversible, and therefore it was but just that the innocent mother of a sinning child should suffer her rightful share of the grief and pain and shame which were the allotted wages of the sin.
The three moved toward the sick room.
At this time the doctor was approaching the house. He was still a reasonable distance away, however. He was a good doctor and a good man, and he had a good heart, but one had to know him a year to get over hating him, two years to learn to endure him, three to learn to like him, and four and five to learn to love him. It was a slow and trying education, but it paid. He was of great stature; he had a lion-like head, a lion-like face, a rough voice, and an eye which was sometimes a pirate's and sometimes a woman's, according to the mood. He knew nothing about etiquette, and cared nothing about it; in speech, manner, carriage, and conduct he was the reverse of conventional. He was frank, to the limit; he had opinions on all subjects; they were always on tap and ready for delivery, and he cared not a little whether his listener liked them or didn't. Whom he loved he loved, and manifested it; whom he didn't love he hated and published it from the housetops. In his young days, he had been a sailor, and the salt-airs of all _____ seas blew from him yet. He was a sturdy and loyal Christian and believed he was the best one in the land and the only one whose Christianity was perfectly sound, healthy, full-charged with common sense and had no decayed places in it. People who had an axe to grind, or people who for any reason wanted to get on the soft side of him, called him The Christian--a phrase whose delicate flattery was music to his ears, and whose capital T was such an enchanting and vivid object to him that he could SEE it when it fell out of a person's mouth even in the dark. Many who were fond of him stood on their consciences with both feet and brazenly called him by that large title habitually because it was a pleasure to them to do anything that would please him. With eager and cordial malice his extensive and diligently cultivated crop of enemies gilded it, beflowered it, and expanded it to "The ONLY Christian." Of these two titles, the! latter had the wider currency; the enemy, being greatly in the majority, attended to that.

According to the passage, who didn't know anything about etiquette?

1
Child's mother
2
Doctor
3
Aunt
4
Child
5
Helen

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