PROSE

 1. D  11. C  21. B  31. C
 2. B  12. C  22. A  32. A
 3. A  13. B  23. D  33. C
 4. C  14. D  24. A  34. D
 5. C  15. B  25. B  35. A
 6. A  16. A  26. B  36. B
 7. B  17. D  27. C  37. C
 8. D  18. D  28. A  38. A
 9. C  19. B  29. B  39. A
 10. B  20. C 30. C   40. D

 


Nobility In Victory

The spirit of Marc Antony did not lack human kindness: for after the battle, when that man handed over the body of Brutus to his freedman to bury, he also ordered that his own general's cloak be placed on the body so that Brutus might be burned with honor. For Antony was thinking that, his enemy being dead, hatred had been laid aside. But when he had learned that the cloak had been taken by the same freedman, roused to great anger, immediately he punished him, saying: "What? Were you ignorant of what man I had entrusted to you to bury?"

Thus, the plains of Philippi not only gladly saw that man's (Antony's) brave and loyal victory, but also happily heard those words of noblest anger.