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adapted from admetus and the shepherd: a greek myth by josephine presto…

Question

adapted from admetus and the shepherd: a greek myth by josephine preston peabody apollo did not live always free of care, though he was the most glorious of the gods. one day, in anger with the cyclopes who work at the forges of vulcan, he sent his arrows after them, to the wrath of all the gods, but especially of zeus. even the divine archer could not go unpunished, and as a penalty he was sent to serve some mortal for a year. now there was a certain king in thessaly, admetus, and there came to him one day a stranger, who asked leave to serve about the palace. none knew his name, but he was very comely, and moreover, when they questioned him he said that he had come from a position of high trust. so without further delay they made him chief shepherd of the royal flocks. every day thereafter, he drove his sheep to the banks of the river amphrysus, and there he sat to watch them. the country folk that passed drew near to wonder at him. he would pipe for hours in the sun. a simple - spoken man he was, yet he seemed to know much more than he would say, and he smiled with a kindly mirth when the people wished him sunny weather. indeed, as days went by, it seemed as if summer had come to stay, and, like the shepherd, found the place friendly. nowhere else were the flocks so white and fair to see, like clouds loitering along a bright sky; sometimes, when he chose, their keeper sang to them. then the grasshoppers drew near and the swans sailed close to the river banks, and the countrymen gathered about to hear wonderful tales of the slaying of the monster python and of a lovely maiden, daphne, who grew into a laurel tree. in time, the rumor of these things drew the king himself to listen: admetus, who had been to see the world, knew at once that this was no earthly shepherd, but a god. from that day, like a true king, he treated his guest with reverence and friendliness, asking no questions, and the god was well pleased. drag the correct text onto the image. what is the best objective summary of the passage? apollo, a god, makes other gods unhappy. the other gods require him to serve mortals for a year. so, apollo becomes a shepherd, and he does his job well. the king, admetus, discovers who apollo is because of his knowledge of the world. apollo was one of the gods. but he made a dreadful mistake and had to serve humans. he did his work as a shepherd very well. people liked him and enjoyed his stories. admetus discovered that apollo was really a god. the glorious apollo did something outrageous, to the wrath of the gods, so he had to serve mortals for a year. he became a shepherd for a king. people were naturally drawn to apollo, as he sang and told stories. eventually, the king, admetus, was sent to serve apollo. because of apollos handsome fellow, and made a good impression

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

To determine the best summary, we analyze each option:

  1. The first option (Apollo, a god, makes other gods unhappy...): The passage doesn't mention other gods being unhappy with Apollo; it focuses on Apollo's punishment and time as a shepherd, so this is incorrect.
  2. The second option (Apollo was one of the gods...): The passage shows Apollo made a mistake (angered gods), became a shepherd, did his job well, and Admetus discovered he was a god. This aligns with the events: Apollo's error, shepherding, and the revelation.
  3. The third option (The glorious Apollo did something outrageous...): The passage says Apollo was sent to serve mortals as punishment for angering gods (sending arrows), but the option's wording about "outrageous" and the focus on storytelling is not the main point. The main event is his punishment and shepherding, so this is incorrect.
  4. The fourth option (The most glorious of the gods, Apollo, was carefree...): The passage starts by saying Apollo was not always free of care, and the focus is on his punishment and time as a shepherd, not his carefree nature or making gods unhappy, so this is incorrect.

Answer:

Apollo was one of the gods. Apollo made a dreadful mistake and had to serve humans. He did his work as a shepherd very well. People liked him and enjoyed his stories. Admetus discovered that Apollo was really a god.