Which statement has an example of a supporting detail from the exemplar text “Remember the Past, But Look to the FutureLinks to an external site.”?

Which statement has an example of a supporting detail from the exemplar text “Remember the Past, But Look to the FutureLinks to an external site.”?

For perhaps the only thing worse than not remembering one’s mistakes and learning from them, is remembering them too much and refusing to move forward at all.

He’s no man in black, but the famed Irish playwright (and co-founder of the prestigious London School of Economics) George Bernard Shaw understood the consequences of allowing our failures to defeat us when he said, “A life spent making mistakes is not only more honorable, but more useful than a life spent doing nothing.”

We all make mistakes, and sometimes those mistakes have some pretty negative consequences.

Unless you’re reading this in a nursing home, I can promise that you haven’t experienced 98 years of failing to achieve your goals—or 105 years, if you’re the Chicago Cubs!—so get back out there and give it another shot.

Unless you’re reading this in a nursing home, I can promise that you haven’t experienced 98 years of failing to achieve your goals—or 105 years, if you’re the Chicago Cubs!—so get back out there and give it another shot.

that is incorrect

Apologies for the confusion. The correct statement that includes an example of a supporting detail from the exemplar text is: "He’s no man in black, but the famed Irish playwright (and co-founder of the prestigious London School of Economics) George Bernard Shaw understood the consequences of allowing our failures to defeat us when he said, “A life spent making mistakes is not only more honorable, but more useful than a life spent doing nothing.”

The statement that has an example of a supporting detail from the exemplar text "Remember the Past, But Look to the Future" is:

"He’s no man in black, but the famed Irish playwright (and co-founder of the prestigious London School of Economics) George Bernard Shaw understood the consequences of allowing our failures to defeat us when he said, “A life spent making mistakes is not only more honorable, but more useful than a life spent doing nothing.”

This statement provides a supporting detail by quoting George Bernard Shaw's statement on the consequences of allowing failures to defeat us.