Answer:
Explanation:
a. William Tell refused to bow to a tyrant. As punishment, he had to shoot an apple off his son's head with an arrow. Tell was an expert archer. He succeeded at the challenge.
B. During the 15th century, in the Swiss canton of Uri, the legendary hero Wilhelm Tell leads the people of the forest cantons in rebellion against tyrannical Austrian rule. Tell himself assassinates the corrupt Austrian governor. The play's underlying theme is the justifiability of violence in political action.
C. A man is fleeing for his life from imperial troops. Tell steps in and rescues him. Soon, the peaceful Tell is embroiled in his country's fight for freedom, which reaches a high point during the apple shoot in act 3, culminating one act later when he slays Gessler with an arrow.
D. After refusing to pay homage to a Hapsburg liege, Tell was forced to submit to the test of marksmanship. Later, Tell killed the tyrant and went on to many a daring exploit in the service of the Old Swiss Confederacy.
Answer:
I can tell you that one of them is #3.
Explanation:
This is true because if the narrator said #3 out loud, and you could hear it, it would most likely be dripping with jealousy. You can tell by the way the sentence was written. If the narrator was also rich, then they would say something like, "Most of these women could afford the privileges of daily life". But the narrator wanted to spend less time talking about how rich these women were, so they got straight to the point. "Most of these women were rich."