Is the first, third, fifth, and seventh one. I took the same quiz.
Answer:
The Tempest written by Wiilliam Shakespeare and first performed in 1611, is the story of an exiled ruler.
Explanation:
In Act I, Scene i, we are introduced with the character "Boatswain" a commoner and the noble characters, whose names are not mentioned but introduced later in the play. The story begins with the characters stuck in the middle of the raging storm. Boatswain and his crew, in the lines 9-19 are trying to save the ship and commands the nobles to go under-deck.
<em>"ALONSO </em>
<em> </em>
<em>Good Boatswain, have care. Where’s the Master? </em>
<em>Play the men</em>
<em>BOATSWAIN </em>
<em> </em>
<em>I pray now, keep below."</em>
<em> </em>
The nobles get offended by the rudeness of the commoner "Boatswain."
<em>GONZALO </em>
<em> </em>
<em>Good, yet remember whom thou hast aboard.</em>
Boatswain's main motive is to save the ship regardless of who his passengers are.
<em>"BOATSWAIN </em>
<em> </em>
<em>None that I more love than myself. You are a councilor. If you can command these elements to silence and work the peace of the present, we will not hand a rope more. Use your authority. If you cannot, give thanks you have lived so long and make yourself ready in your cabin for the mischance of the hour, if it so hap.—Cheerly, good hearts!—Out of our way, I say."</em>
the grim outlook of the late Victorian era
Answer: To guard against the influence of factions while preserving liberty.
Explanation: After having presented the problems brought about by the existence of factions in democracy, Madison argues that both forbidding factions would go against liberty and preventing them from coming into existence (by enforcing absolute equality) is impossible. The solution he proposes is to let factions be and only control their effects to avoid sinister interests from harming the population.
Short sentences would create a fast pace