The correct answer is:
B. mistaken identity
Explanation:
Twelfth Night is a story about transgression. Shakespeare plays with the ideas of love, confused identity, and social class in this parody. The play really contains three plotlines that come usually in the final scene. The plotlines are held collectively by the character of Feste, the Fool, who can cross social boundaries because of his freedom from working, the right of an "entitled Fool.
The three appeals are logos, ethos, and pathos.
Pathos is an appeal to emotion, ethos is an appeal through your own credibility, and logos is an appeal to logic.
Logos is the answer you're looking for.
I think that they all had some type of practice of the things at this part
The conflict of this would be....
Man Vs. Society
Answer:Dawson I believe.
Explanation: Because the entire sentence is telling you that they left Dawson making it the main focus of the sentence.