ACT Reading Practice Test 30
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SOCIAL SCIENCE:
The Gunpowder Plot Remember,
remember the 5th of November, The gunpowder treason and plot. I know of no reason why gunpowder treason Should ever be forgot.
Line 5 This famous children’s poem speaks directly to the Gunpowder Plot of 1605 in which a group of Roman Catholic coconspirators attempted to blow up Westminster Palace during the formal opening of Parliament. King James I of England (James VI
10 of Scotland) was in attendance to address the joint assembly of the House of Lords and the House of Commons. The failed bomb plot certainly could have killed the King and potentially the rest of the English Legislature; it would have been a near-complete
15 removal of the aristocracy. Guy Fawkes was instrumental in the final stages of the plot, but was apprehended just prior to completing his work. Shortly thereafter, Fawkes and his coconspirators were put to death for treason and attempted murder. It has been said by
20 many—quite tongue-in-cheek—that Guy Fawkes was the only man ever to enter Parliament with honest intentions. The plot, masterminded by Robert Catesby, had surprising origins. He and Guy Fawkes, along with
25 several other Roman Catholics, were thought to be denouncers of the king’s own Church of England. Consequently, they risked civil and criminal penalties. In realizing that Spain, at the time a great Catholic world power, was involved in too many wars to help 30 the cause of English Catholics, Catesby decided that unless something was done from within, nothing would likely change. Luck smiled upon the plotters when they stumbled upon a cellar for rent beneath the House of Lords; the
35 original plan, to dig a mineshaft beneath Westminster, proved remarkably difficult, the rock and debris requiring removal in secret. Being able to rent a cellar under Parliament expedited their efforts immensely, allowing them to fill the cellar with 1,800 pounds of
40 gunpowder. The one crucial flaw in the plot, though, was that several conspirators had scruples over the potential for harm to other Catholics likely to be in attendance during the opening address. One of the men wrote
45 a letter of warning to Lord Monteagle, a fellow Catholic, who received it on October 26. Learning about the letter the following day, several conspirators wished to abort the plan, yet the decision was made to continue when Guy Fawkes confirmed that
50 nothing within the cellar had been discovered. Despite Fawkes’ confidence, Lord Monteagle took the letter seriously, and tasked the secretary of state with completing a search of all spaces beneath Westminster. Early in the morning on November 5, Fawkes was
55 apprehended in the cellar. Over the next few days, he was tortured until he confessed the identities of the other individuals who contributed to the plot. On January 31, 1606, each man convicted of treason was taken to Old Palace Yard to be hanged, drawn,
60 and quartered—this most exotic form of execution was intended as a lesson to the public: treason would not be tolerated under any circumstances. Currently, on November 5 of each year, British children burn effigies of Fawkes and recite the
65 renowned poem as a way of remembering this influential figure of the past. Guy Fawkes Day serves as a chilling reminder to everyone, not just the British, that if pressed hard enough, an individual will press back. No brutal threat can stop the most committed believer
70 from rising in defense of his beliefs.
One of the points the author seeks to make in the passage is that some English Roman Catholics in 1605:
were convicted of treason for supporting the king.
sought religious freedom by rebelling against the current regime.
were forced into hiding by the powerful religious minority behind the monarchy.
gained notoriety by conspiring against the Roman Catholic church.
The author asserts that the Gunpowder Plot coconspirators were generally:
capable and sufficiently covert.
inept but sufficiently covert.
capable but insufficiently covert.
inept and insufficiently covert.
The author uses the description of the modern Guy Fawkes Day to point out that some acts are:
too powerful to let their lessons fade into history.
so powerful that adults must make light of them for their children’s sake.
more powerful for people today than they were at the time they occurred.
so powerful that children must be reminded of their depravity.
When the author asserts that Guy Fawkes had honest intentions (lines 21–22), he most likely means that members of parliament are:
not concerned about their perception among the people.
too detached from average citizens to provide effective leadership.
prepared to surrender power to religious minorities.
prone to exploiting their power by being deceitful.
According to the passage, when are citizens most pressed to act against the government?
When parliament meets in joint session
When there is collusion between the monarch and the judiciary
When personal beliefs are threatened
When there are bad economic times
As it is used in line 60, the word exotic means:
alluring.
mysterious.
unusual.
foreign.
According to the passage, under which of the following government actions would an uprising most likely occur?
Government troops are given permission to conduct unwarranted searches of suspected dissidents.
An average-looking murder suspect at-large prompts police to round up for interrogation anyone who looks like the perpetrator.
Sales and income tax rates are raised sharply at the same time due to budget shortfalls.
Chocolate, gold, and other precious commodities are strictly rationed during wartime.
The passage makes the claim that brutal threats from the government are not a solution to the risk of public rebellion because:
harsh punishment of dissenters only breeds further contempt.
there will always be certain individuals who risk the punishment to overthrow a government.
weapons of assassination are too easily concealed to provide reasonable security for government offi- cials.
often the inciting rebels are impossible to locate.
As it is used in lines 33–34, the phrase stumbled upon most nearly means:
discovered.
tripped over.
walked on.
sought.
The mineshaft in line 35 refers to:
a tunnel dug to facilitate extraction of a particular mineral.
a metaphorical deep pit from which nothing can climb out.
an underground space to be filled with explosives.
a crawlspace to permit clandestine observation of Parliament.
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