Prince Edward learns numerous things when he is dressed as the pauper in Twain's "The Prince and the Pauper." He learns that what he thought was freedom is actually poverty and neglect from his family, he learns of the hardships that his citizens face due to the injustices of certain laws and he learns the filthy conditions of the nation's prisons.
Answer:
First Person - the narrator is a character in the story
The argument that uses a non sequitur fallacy is C, "Regulations on motorists should be lifted because factories are a bigger source of pollution"
Explanation: Non sequitur fallacy is when the conclusion doesn't follow the premises. That said in different words, the premises is an irrelevant reason to support the conclusion.
So, as true as it is that factories are a bigger source of pollution, the conclusion does not follow from the premises. The fact that regulations on motorists should be lifted, does not necessarily mean that the reason to do that is that factories are a bigger source of pollution.
It is a strange experience, and it confuses him.
in order to be strange it imply that the narrator have not felt this feeling before. furthermore, the feeling of confuse emphasises that it is a new experience for the narrator to the point the narrator is not able to identify the hunger.