This is false. Confucianism originated in China under Confucius.
I presume you have these lines in mind:
"CALIBAN (kneeling): As I told thee before, I am subject to a tyrant, a sorcerer that by his cunning hath cheated me of the island."
The correct answer is B: He is enslaved by a tyrant. He then explains that his tyrant (Prospero) has cunningly deceived him and took his island from him. Caliban wants Trinculo and Stefano to help him murder Prospero and retrieve the island.
Answer:
Option C: The real tree is more detailed and smells fresher than the plastic trees that line the streets.
Explanation:
The entire story talks about the superiority, beauty and realness of the real trees in contrast with the inferiority and artificiality of the plastic trees. So the main theme of the story is summed up in option C, i.e. "The real tree is more detailed and smells fresher than the plastic trees that line the streets."
Option A is not correct because this idea does not run throughout the story; it is mentioned in just one line and is just cause of the disappearance of real trees.
Option B is incorrect because, it is just an incident in the story not a theme or idea of the whole story.
Option D is incorrect because it is part of the setting of the story with no theme in it.
First, what is the title and author of the work to which you refer?
I don't believe that any of these are run-on sentences. This is because they all possess some form of punctuation, which creates a small to moderate oause in the sentence, allowing for the person reading to breathe in between, and preventing a run-on sentence.