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In "On the Rule of the Road," the example of a lady walking in the middle of the road highlights:

AThe importance of freedom

BMisuse of liberty

CGender equality

DTraffic rules

Answer:

B. Misuse of liberty

Read Explanation:

  • Gardiner begins with a humorous anecdote about a stout old lady who decides to walk down the middle of the road, ignoring the traffic.

  • He starts this essay by describing an incident witnessed by him in Petrograd (now renamed Saint Petersburg in Russia); he saw that an old lady was walking in the middle of the road or street that caused confusion and danger to her and other drivers and pedestrians.

  • She justifies her behavior by claiming her "liberty."

  • This incident leads Gardiner to reflect on the concept of liberty in a societal context.

  • When someone tells her that the pavement is a place for pedestrians, she replies "I'm going to walk where I want to walk. We got liberty now." The writer used this phrase to illustrate the danger of that person being "liberty-drunk" and forgetting that personal liberty must be in balance with the liberty of the people's lives in society.


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