The answer is personal and spiritual exploration because romantic literature was meant to make the mind wander into romantic stories of love and romance where one found out more about themselves while falling in love. At least, that is my best guess since it's certainly not supposed to be rational and well reasoned ideas, it's not about religion, and I don't think it's supposed to empasise on society.
In Jamestown it was the belief that great wealth was to be found. Plymouth colonists believed they were reenacting the exodus of Jews from Egypt and that North America represented the wilderness.
Answer:
The statement that best describes the colonists' view of their relationship with the British government is <em>A: The colonists have demanded fair treatment from the British government many times, and they believe separating from Britain is their last resort. </em>
Explanation:
What this excerpt from the Declaration of Independence exposses in these lines is that the colonists have tried many times to make the British government attend their needs as a society: "<em>We have warned them from time to time of attempts by their legislature to extend an unwarrantable jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here.</em>" It says that they feel they have been "<em>deaf</em>" to their needs, and, as a consequence, they have to separate from this government.
Answer:
A
Explanation:
Process of Elimination
Without reading the text, you can use context clues in the question. Only questions A and B mention her general time in school. We can rule out B, because rather than a main Idea, it shows a detail, leaving us with A as the most reasonable answer