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Read the passage from The Odyssey - Penelope. "My lady, never a man in the wide world should have a fault to find with you. Your name has gone out under heaven like the sweet honor of some god-fearing king, who rules in equity over the strong: his black lands bear both wheat and barley, fruit trees laden bright, new lambs at lambing time—and the deep sea gives great hauls of fish by his good strategy, his folk fare well.”

Based on the epic simile, the reader should envision Penelope as a queen who is
A) conscientious.
B) decisive.
C) judgmental.
D) righteous.

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User Abie
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2 Answers

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Based on the epic simile, the reader should envision Penelope as a queen who is A) conscientious.
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User MrEvgenX
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Answer:

Based on the epic simile, the reader should envision Penelope as a queen who is D) righteous.

Step-by-step explanation:

By definition, a righteous person is someone upstanding, decent. Someone who does everything according to what is morally correct. In the excerpt we are studying here, Penelope is described as a righteous woman. She has no fault, no blame, since she constantly does what is right. Her name is talked of in association with honor, equity, fruitfulness.

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User TJ Tang
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