Which sentence from "The Working Man" would provide evidence for the inference that the man did not intend to be unkind to his family?

A. a man lived in a lovely house with a lovely wife and two lovely children?

B. Yet, he didn't know how lovely they were because he was never home?

C. He thought to himself, "if I work very hard then I will advance, and then ill be happy."

D. His wife replied, "When you devote all of your time and attention to your work for thirty years and show no interest in your children, do not expect their interest in return."

Story:
A man lived in a lovely house with a lovely wife and two lovely children. Yet, he didn't know how lovely they were because he was never home. He was always working. He thought to himself, "If I work very hard then I will advance, and then I will be happy." He worked day and night. Meanwhile, his children grew up and his wife grew old, and he didn't seem to notice at all. On the day of his death, he looked at his wife and said, "I won't be on this Earth much longer, why haven't my children and grandchildren come to see me?"

His wife replied, "When you devote all of your time and attention to your work for thirty years and show no interest in your children, do not expect their interest in return."

B. Yet, he didn't know how lovely they were because he was never home?

The sentence that provides evidence for the inference that the man did not intend to be unkind to his family is sentence D: "His wife replied, 'When you devote all of your time and attention to your work for thirty years and show no interest in your children, do not expect their interest in return.'" This sentence suggests that the man's lack of attention and interest in his children was unintentional and reveals that he did not purposefully intend to be unkind to his family.