- Mon Jun 17, 2019 5:30 pm
#65654
The discussion in passage B of a third kind of opera (at the end of the first paragraph of that passage) indicates that while there were some early operas that treated the music as less important than the words, they were generally unsuccessful. Author A believes that the music is more important that the words. Thus, the author of passage A would likely view that discussion in passage B as evidence that he is correct about music being an important element. That's answer B, the correct answer.
Answer A is something that is close to what the author of passage A said in general about opera: "A striking effect
may be produced, but at the expense of the purity of each art." But this quote has nothing to do with what author A would say about the discussion of the third type of opera in passage B. We need an answer that captures how author A would respond to that discussion, and this quote about "purity" does not relate to that discussion. Also, I am not so sure that the author of passage A would agree that the lack of "purity" is the same as both forms being "diminished" - after all, he did say in his first paragraph that words can gain by being set to music!
Answer C is something that author A might actually disagree with, given that he says about opera "an opera is largely independent of words". But again, this has nothing to do with the discussion in passage B of the third kind of opera, the kind that failed.
Answer D is one that the author of passage A would surely disagree with, vehemently, as it directly contradicts his entire argument. He believes that music is greater alone than when combined with words.
Answer E would also be something that author A disagrees with, because he does not believe that all elements in an opera are of equal importance. He thinks the music is more important than the libretto. And once again, this answer has nothing at all to do with how the author of passage A would respond to the discussion in passage B of the third, failed kind of opera, where the words are more important than the music.
Focus on the question here. It's not just "what does Author A think" in general - it's "what does he think about a specific discussion in passage B". Your answer has to relate to that latter discussion, and how the author of passage A would respond to it.
Adam M. Tyson
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