Answer:
C
Explanation:
... domestic slaves receiving higher-quality clothing than field slaves, who wore the plainest and coarsest clothing.
Answer:
A) He thinks they should try and live in peace because he desires goods to trade.
Explanation:
Powhatan makes the argument that he will work well with the English, without the use of coercion or force of any kind. He and his people are willing to trade and live at peace. He does not threaten. His strong advice is for the settlers to put down their weapons as well as negative attitudes, and work along side Powhatan and his people.
The answer cannot be "B" because he does not ask them to leave, but to lay down their weapons and negative attitude.
The answer cannot be "C" because he does not express that they will attack first. In fact, the gist of the quote alludes to the fact that they have already attacked and either attempted to take or succeeded in taking things by force the could have had just by asking.
The answer cannot be "D" because he is asking them to live in peace. He provides an eloquent assessment of what has happened and what could have happened instead. He paints a picture of how things can be in the future, if they will just live as Powhatan advises.
Answer: Freedom of religion, a wealth of the New World.
Explanation:
Religious and economic reasons are elementary factors of Puritan migrations to the New World. In England, the Puritans came into conflict with the church but also with the state over religion. Namely, during the sixteenth century, the Protestant movement spread throughout Europe. Protestants demanded a return to original Christianity and criticized the luxury of the church. In England, the movement had a large number of supporters called Puritans. Unable to achieve their new world goals, they decided to leave for England and migrate to North America.
Since the discovery of North America, news of wealth in the New World has arrived in Europe. America then had many natural and mineral resources. Certainly, the effort to exploit North America's natural and mineral resources was one of the elements of the English colonization of the continent.