PrepTest 64, Section 2, Question 15

Difficulty: 
Passage
Game

The French novelist Colette (1873�1954) has been widely praised for the vividness of her language. But many critics complain that her novels are indifferent to important moral questions. This charge is unfair. Each of her novels is a poetic condensation of a major emotional crisis in the life of an ordinary person of her time. Such emotional crises almost invariably raise important moral questions.

The French novelist Colette (1873�1954) has been widely praised for the vividness of her language. But many critics complain that her novels are indifferent to important moral questions. This charge is unfair. Each of her novels is a poetic condensation of a major emotional crisis in the life of an ordinary person of her time. Such emotional crises almost invariably raise important moral questions.

The French novelist Colette (1873�1954) has been widely praised for the vividness of her language. But many critics complain that her novels are indifferent to important moral questions. This charge is unfair. Each of her novels is a poetic condensation of a major emotional crisis in the life of an ordinary person of her time. Such emotional crises almost invariably raise important moral questions.

The French novelist Colette (1873�1954) has been widely praised for the vividness of her language. But many critics complain that her novels are indifferent to important moral questions. This charge is unfair. Each of her novels is a poetic condensation of a major emotional crisis in the life of an ordinary person of her time. Such emotional crises almost invariably raise important moral questions.

Question
15

Which one of the following is an assumption on which the argument depends?

Critics who suggest that Colette's novels are indifferent to great moral questions of her time greatly underestimate her literary achievements.

A novel that poetically condenses a major emotional crisis does not have to be indifferent to the important moral questions raised by that crisis.

To deserve the level of praise that Colette has received, a novelist's work must concern itself with important moral questions.

The vividness of Colette's language was not itself the result of poetic condensation.

Colette's purpose in poetically condensing emotional crises in the lives of characters in her novels was to explore some of the important moral questions of her time.

B
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