|Question 5Verbal

Source Texts

Text
The following text is adapted from George Eliot's 1857 short story "The Sad Fortunes of the Rev. Amos Barton." Mr. Ely is a clergyman in the town of Milby.

By the laity of Milby and its neighbourhood [Mr. Ely] was regarded as a man of quite remarkable powers and learning, who must make a considerable sensation in London pulpits and drawing-rooms on his occasional visit to the metropolis; and by his brother clergy he was regarded as a discreet and agreeable fellow. Mr. Ely never got into a warm discussion; he suggested what might be thought, but rarely said what he thought himself; he never let either men or women see that he was laughing at them, and he never gave any one an opportunity of laughing at him.
Which choice best describes the overall structure of the text?
It details how Mr. Ely initially won his colleagues' admiration and then reports on the circumstances that prompted them to revise their views of him.
A
It implies that Mr. Ely's neighbors are more naive in their estimation of him than people in London are and then explains why his neighbors have been so easily misled.
B
It illuminates how Mr. Ely conducts himself differently in public and in private and then touches on why he is cautious to reveal some aspects of his character to other people.
C
It presents the favorable opinion of Mr. Ely that other people hold and then describes the behaviors of Mr. Ely that enable him to maintain that favorable opinion.
D