Answer:
The answer is indeed letter A. Antony calls the assassins "honourable men” but subtly turns the crowd against them.
Explanation:
At this point of Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar", Caesar has been betrayed and killed by his men. Mark Antony, who was loyal to Caesar, now pretends to be loyal to Brutus and Cassius, Caesar's assassins, to save his own life. However, at the funeral, he wittily shows the crowd that Brutus and Cassius are not good men. Even though he calls them "honourable", he does so ironically. The Roman people loved Caesar and very well knew his qualities. By emphasizing the fact that Brutus is trying to find some flaw to blame on Caesar, Antony shows the crowd that Brutus is against Caesar and should not be trusted. He then makes it clear that it is not just Brutus since "so are they all, all honourable men". Antony smartly conveys the very opposite of what his words are saying.
I have no clue what the question is here
When he wrote This excerpt he was referring to knowledge, he said that he reads a book a day and that knowledge was his banknote that got him so far,
The correct option is Tories- Whigs.
The Tories was a political party in England that started in the 1680s. They advocated monarchy and state should work together. They were also part of the nobility and supported conservative ideas.
The Whigs on the other hand was the opposing political party of the Tories since they advocated freedom of religion and liberal ideas such as parliament supremacy. The opposed the Catholic Church and defied monarchy. They also supported the emerging middle-class.