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Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Quotation Selection Questions
Passage adapted from Homer's Odysseus, the Hero of Ithaca trans. Samuel Butler (1900).
"And what, Telemachus, has led you to take this long sea voyage to Lacedaemon? Are you on public or private business? Tell me all about it."
"I have come, sir replied Telemachus, "to see if you can tell me anything about my father. I am being eaten out of house and home; my fair estate is being wasted, and my house is full of miscreants who keep killing great numbers of my sheep and oxen, on the pretence of paying their addresses to my mother. Therefore, I am suppliant at your knees if haply you may tell me about my father's melancholy end, whether you saw it with your own eyes, or heard it from some other traveller; for he was a man born to trouble. Do not soften things out of any pity for myself, but tell me in all plainness exactly what you saw. If my brave father Ulysses ever did you loyal service either by word or deed, when you Achaeans were harassed by the Trojans, bear it in mind now as in my favour and tell me truly all."
Menelaus on hearing this was very much shocked. "So," he exclaimed, "these cowards would usurp a brave man's bed? A hind might as well lay her new born young in the lair of a lion, and then go off to feed in the forest or in some grassy dell: the lion when he comes back to his lair will make short work with the pair of them- and so will Ulysses with these suitors. By father Jove, Minerva, and Apollo, if Ulysses is still the man that he was when he wrestled with Philomeleides in Lesbos, and threw him so heavily that all the Achaeans cheered him- if he is still such and were to come near these suitors, they would have a short shrift and a sorry wedding.
If, as Menelaus suggests, Ulysses is a man whose wrath is to be feared, what can we infer is the reason the interlopers feel safe enough cause Telemachus so much trouble?
They believe they can defeat Ulysses in battle.
They would be able to hide in the forest if he comes back.
They believe Ulysses was killed during the Trojan War and cannot hurt them.
They think they can manipulate Telemachus.
They believe the gods are on their side.
They believe Ulysses was killed during the Trojan War and cannot hurt them.
If we read Telemachus's plea to Menelaus, we can see that he is begging him to describe his father's death. Since he believes his father has been killed we can reason that the suitors that are plaguing him do as well.
Example Question #1 : Quotation Selection Questions
Passage adapted from Thomas Paine's Common Sense (1776).
It hath lately been asserted in parliament, that the colonies have no relation to each other but through the parent country, i. e. that Pennsylvania and the Jerseys, and so on for the rest, are sister colonies by the way of England; this is certainly a very round-about way of proving relationship, but it is the nearest and only true way of proving enemyship, if I may so call it. France and Spain never were, nor perhaps ever will be our enemies as Americans, but as our being the subjects of Great-Britain.
But Britain is the parent country, say some. Then the more shame upon her conduct. Even brutes do not devour their young, nor savages make war upon their families; wherefore the assertion, if true, turns to her reproach; but it happens not to be true, or only partly so, and the phrase parent or mother country hath been jesuitically adopted by the king and his parasites, with a low papistical design of gaining an unfair bias on the credulous weakness of our minds. Europe, and not England, is the parent country of America. This new world hath been the asylum for the persecuted lovers of civil and religious liberty from every part of Europe. Hither have they fled, not from the tender embraces of the mother, but from the cruelty of the monster; and it is so far true of England, that the same tyranny which drove the first emigrants from home, pursues their descendants still.
Which quote supports the idea that the American Colonies are not an extension of Great Britain?
"But Britain is the parent country, say some. Then the more shame upon her conduct. Even brutes do not devour their young, nor savages make war upon their families."
"This new world hath been the asylum for the persecuted lovers of civil and religious liberty from every part of Europe."
"...that the same tyranny which drove the first emigrants from home, pursues their descendants still."
"....and the phrase parent or mother country hath been jesuitically adopted by the king and his parasites..."
"...this is certainly a very round-about way of proving relationship, but it is the nearest and only true way of proving enemyship..."
"This new world hath been the asylum for the persecuted lovers of civil and religious liberty from every part of Europe."
While Paine gives many examples of his revulsion of British rule, his argument is that colonists come from all over Europe seeking asylum. With such a diverse founding based on flight from persecution rather than expansion, Britain cannot claim that it is the only parent of the American Colonies.