The impossibility of escaping fate
Answer: Option A.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The following excerpt has been taken from the poem written by Virgil. The name of the poem is "The Aeneid". The main message or the theme of the poem is that one can not run away from the fate and destiny. What is written in the fate of a particular person, will happen. There is no running away from that.
There are certain lines in the poem which prove this theme of impossibility of escaping the fate. Those lines are "Arms, and the man I sing, who, forc'd by fate", "The Latian realm, and built the destin'd town". These show that destiny can not be escaped.
The fledgling would have more stuff to run into, in the city then if he was in the country.
Answer: Ministry
There were several states in the society of the Middle Ages. A pardoner, like the one who appears in <em>The Canterbury Tales</em>, is likely to have belonged to the class of the ministry. The ministry included all people who dedicated their lives to Christianity, such as nuns, priests and friars. The state system of the Middle Ages operated under the umbrella of feudalism.