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QUESTION.TXT
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1994-03-07
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1. On a clear day you chance upon a strange animal, its leg
trapped in a hunter's clawsnare. Judging from the bleeding
it will not survive long. Do you:
a) Draw your dagger, mercifully ending it's life
with a single thrust? (5v)
b) Do not interfere in the natural evolution of events,
but rather take the opportunity to learn more about
a strange animal that you have never seen
before? (5l)
c) Use herbs from your pack to put it to sleep, then
free it from the clawsnare and take it somewhere
where it can be safe, knowing that in doing so you
will probably deprive a hunter and his family of
sustenance? (5c)
2. One summer afternoon your father, Talin, gives you a choice
of chores. Would you rather:
a) Work in the forge with him casting iron for a new plow? (5v)
b) Gather herbs for your mother who is preparing dinner? (5l)
c) Go catch fish at the stream using a net and line? (5c)
3. Your father and you are returning from the town market when
you see a small boy running from a store. In his hands he
clutches a loaf of bread. Behind him races the baker with a
cleaver in his hands. You know that the boy must be hungry,
but the town is suffering from a drought, which has made
food valuable. Do you:
a) Side with justice and urge your father to stop the boy? (5v)
b) Help the poor waif by running into the baker's way? (5c)
c) Stand out of the way and wait to see what your father
decides, trusting his experience? (5l)
4. Your father tells you one night the story of his battle at
Borim Valley, where his men had routed the enemy. They would
have captured them all if not for the brave sacrifice of a
young Sergeant on the opposing side, who held a pass long
enough for his men to retreat to safety. He had done so knowing
that it would cost him his life. If you had been that man would
you have:
a) Fled, rationalizing that your experience with battle
tactics was too valuable to be wasted, and could make
the difference later? (5l)
b) Held the pass also, so that the men under your command
could flee, though it meant your life? (5v)
c) Searched for some means to distract the enemy so that
your men might have the possibility of escaping, but
not at the cost of your own life? (5c)
5. Your mother sends you to the market with a list of goods to buy.
After you finish you find that by mistake a shopkeeper has given
you too much money back in exchange for one of the items. Do you:
a) Return to the store and give the shopkeeper his hard-earned
money, explaining to him the mistake? (5v)
b) Pocket the extra money, knowing that shopkeepers in
general tend to overcharge customers anyway? (5c)
c) Decide to put the extra money to good use and purchase
items that would help your family? (5l)
6. While in a market place you witness a thief cut a purse from a
noble. Even as he does so the noble notices and calls for the city
guards. In his haste to get away, the thief drops the purse near
you. Surprisingly, no one seems to notice the bag of coins at
your feet. Do you:
a) Pick up the bag and pocket it, knowing that the extra
windfall will help your family in times of trouble? (5c)
b) Pick up the bag and signal to the guard, knowing that
the only honorable thing to do is return the money to
its rightful owner? (5v)
c) Leave the bag there, knowing that it is better not to
get involved? (5l)
7. Your father sends you on a task which you loathe, cleaning the
stables. On the way there, pitchfork in hand, you run into your
friend from the homestead near your own. He offers to do it for
you, in return for a future favor of his choosing. Do you:
a) Decline his offer, knowing that your father expects you
to do the work, and it is better not to be in debt? (5v)
b) Accept his offer, reasoning that as long as the stables
are cleaned, it matters not who does the cleaning? (5c)
c) Ask him to help you, knowing that two people can do the
job faster than one, and agree to help him with one task
of his choosing in the future? (5l)
8. Your mother asks you to help fix the stove. While you are working
a very hot pipe slips its moorings and falls towards her.
Do you:
a) Push your mother out of the way? (5l)
b) Grab the hot pipe and try and push it away? (5v)
c) Position yourself between the pipe and your mother? (5c)
9. While in town the baker gives you a sweetroll. Delighted you take
it into an alley to enjoy, only to be intercepted by a gang of
three other kids your age. The leader demands the sweetroll,
or else he and his friends will beat you and take it. Do you:
a) Drop the sweetroll and step on it, then get ready for
the fight? (5v)
b) Give him the sweetroll now without argument, knowing
that later this afternoon you will have all your friends
with you and can come and take whatever he owes you? (5l)
c) Act like you're going to give him the sweetroll but at
the last minute throw it in the air, hoping that they'll
pay attention to it long enough for you to get a shot
in on the leader? (5c)
10. Entering town you find that you are witness to a very well
dressed man running from a crowd. He screams to you for help.
The crowd behind him seems very angry. Do you:
a) Rush to the man's aid immediately, despite your lack of
knowledge of the circumstances? (5v)
b) Rush to the town's aid immediately, despite your lack of
knowledge of the circumstances? (5c)
c) Stand aside and allow the man and mob to pass, realizing
that it is probably best not to get involved? (5l)
11. You and your best friend buy your first daggers together, a
matched pair. You loan him the amount since he doesn't have
enough gold, and he agrees to pay you back later. After leaving
the shop you and he sit down to marvel at your new weapons. To
your dismay you notice that there is a small notch on the blade
of the dagger you selected. Your friend asks you to please watch
his weapon for him while he runs an errand. Do you:
a) Wait for your friend's return then point out the flaw
in your dagger and return to the weapons shop to demand
a refund. (5v)
b) Switch the daggers, rationalizing that since you paid for
them you should get the first choice, and that if your
friend ever notices the notch, you could always take him
back to the weapon shop and get a refund? (5c)
c) Keep his dagger safe until his return, then switch the
daggers with your best friend's knowledge, justifying it
with the fact that you paid for them, and then offer to
accompany him back to the weapons shop? (5l)
12. You are at weapons practice with Armsmaster Festil. He is very
old now, but takes his teaching very seriously. In fact you have
heard him comment that it is all he has left in life. Today he
has ceaselessly taunted you at every mistake. Finally he asks
you to attack him with the same technique you just did, in an
effort to show you the proper execution. Do you:
a) Do the technique just fast enough so that he can block it,
knowing that it is more important to allow the master
to retain dignity, regardless of your personal feelings? (5v)
b) Attack him at full speed, knowing that you could probably
score the hit and justify his unfair treatment of you by
showing the class that you were actually doing it right? (5c)
c) Refuse and leave practice, unable to compromise your
anger with his dignity, and realizing that whatever
course you choose would cause you to lose respect for
either him or for yourself? (5l)
13. While throwing a ball to you your friend breaks a window on
his house. His father rushes out and demands to know who broke
the window. You know that your friend's father is a strict
disciplinarian and will punish your friend severely if he takes
the blame. You on the other hand, not being his son, could get
away virtually unscathed. Do you:
a) Raise your hand and take the blame before your friend can
answer? (5v)
b) Remain silent and not get involved? (5l)
c) Point at your friend, knowing that anything else would
probably delay the inevitable and make things just that
much worse for him? (5c)
14. Armsmaster Festil during a lesson on strategy remarks, 'The best
victory is to completely and totally humiliate your opponent'.
He then turns to you and asks you if you agree with him. You know
the Armsmaster has been in numerous life and death conflicts and
has the experience of a seasoned warrior. Do you:
a) Agree with his remark, knowing that at this moment your
experience is not enough to justify any stance but total
agreement with whatever your Armsmaster says, a man who
has dedicated his life to strategy? (5v)
b) Disagree with his remark, reasoning that it must be some
type of test, and that the truth will only come from
opposition with his opinion, and not sheep-like agreement? (5c)
c) Refuse to answer the question, choosing to withhold an
opinion until you have more experience and can converse
on the subject in an intelligent manner with him? (5l)
15. The senior student in your weapons class has trounced you
unmercifully for the past several years. Today is the Tournament
of Students and you find with dismay that you are paired against
him for your first match. As you prepare your friend approaches
and offers to tell you of an injury the senior student suffered
in yesterday's sparring class, which you missed. Do you:
a) Accept the offer, knowing that it would allow you to
concentrate on the injured area and greatly increase
your chances of beating him? (5c)
b) Refuse the offer, knowing that win or lose you would
rather do it through your own skill and not some extra
knowledge in what should be a fair and honorable fight? (5v)
c) Accept the offer, reasoning that it is better to have
the knowledge in case you need it, and realizing that
having the knowledge does not necessarily mean using it? (5l)
16. An old man stops you on the way to market, claiming to have been
robbed. He is lying on the trail and seems gravely injured. He
asks you to run to town and get the constable. You give him your
word that you will go directly to town and bring the constable
back. As you make your way back you notice a suspicious man
creeping along another trail. He doesn't seem to notice you yet.
Do you:
a) Follow the man, reasoning that if this man is the robber
you could lead the constable directly to him and
safeguard other travelers, although it would mean
breaking your word? (5c)
b) Take note of him but continue on, reasoning that the man
on the trail is hurt too badly to stop, regardless of
any other consideration? (5l)
c) Take note of him but continue on, reasoning that your word
is your bond and that it takes precedence over
anything else? (5v)
17. While fishing one sunny afternoon you find that the boots which
you discarded are now full of ants who are busily making their
way from a piece of bread you dropped to their anthill. Do you:
a) Pick up the boots wash all the ants off now, even though
you are not leaving until dusk? (5l)
b) Watch the ants, curious as to how they work so
efficiently, and content to live and let live? (5v)
c) Make boats out of leaves and then send each ant down
the stream to pass the time until a fish bites? (5c)
18. You hear Armsmaster Festil remark during weapons class, 'The
intent of your opponent can be seen in his blade'. Many of the
students scoff at this, though not openly. Do you:
a) Feel that the disrespect the students show at this points
to something which they do not understand, and therefore
causes you to focus your efforts on understanding it all
the more? (5c)
b) Feel that he means the way the opponent attacks and
moves shows you how he feels? (5v)
c) Realize that Armsmaster Festil should not be the object
of scorn, but rather one of respect, for he has lived a
full life and survived things none of the students could
imagine? (5l)
19. The town has a lottery in which the winning chit is called. You
look in shock as the winning chit number matches your own! Before
you can say anything another family walks forward. You have seen
them before and know that they are extremely poor. Your family on
the other hand is very well off, and could do without the
100 gold piece prize. Do you:
a) Say nothing and allow the other family to claim the prize? (5v)
b) Stand and show your chit, knowing that the prize is
rightfully yours? (5c)
c) Stand and show your chit, and offer to split the prize
in half with the other family? (5l)
20. Armsmaster Festil poses a question one day to his class. A company
of 100 men is attempting to flee from the enemy. There are two
paths out of the broken stronghold. One path will kill half the
men under the officers command, but the other half would survive.
The other path has a fifty percent chance that everyone would die,
but also a fifty percent chance that everyone would survive. As
the commanding officer would you:
a) Choose the path that would guarantee half your men would
survive? (5l)
b) Choose the path that has a fifty percent chance that all
would survive, and a fifty percent chance that all would
perish? (5v)
c) Turn the choice over to the men and let them decide by
majority vote which path they should commit
themselves to? (5c)
21. You have a great aunt and a great uncle living in two different
nearby villages, both of whom have asked your father to allow you
to live with them for a few weeks. Your father knows where
he plans to send you, but he is curious about your opinion. Given
the choice, would you rather:
a) Live with your great aunt -- a wise old woman of considerable
wealth. Living in luxury for a few weeks could not only
be enlightening, it could also be very interesting. (5c)
b) Live with your great uncle -- a sick old man who has
always been something of a stranger to you. A few weeks with
him may be ardorous, but he is in more need of your help
than your great aunt. (5v)
c) Think of a way to divide your time between your great aunt
and great uncle. Perhaps you will not be able to spend
as much time with either as much as you would like, but
neither would be left out. (5l)
22. A friend has on several occassions made remarks about how much he
likes a particular gold ring of yours. One day you discover that
this ring is missing and after making a thorough search, find it
in a coat your friend had left in your pantry.
Are you most inclined to:
a) Ask your friend how he came about the ring, reasoning that it is
highly probable that he found it and meant to return it to you. (5v)
b) Confront him with his theft. You know that there is no way the ring
just fell into his pocket by accident, and therefore he is nothing
but a common thief who would betray you for material gain. (5c)
c) Say nothing, deciding instead to wait and see what your friend does.
If he is innocent or guilty, you will know by whatever actions he
takes. At that time, you can confront him with the truth. (5l)
23. A good friend of yours is in love with a girl from a neighboring
village, a girl who barely knows him. He is extremely shy and
inexperienced, and he pleads for your help. Would you suggest
he:
a) Go to her immediately and declare his love. If the relationship
is to be, he needs to be honest from the start. You offer to
accompany him to the village for support. (5v)
b) Find out more about this girl using any contact he can find in
her village. He will not be so shy if he knows something about her,
and may even find out she is not the right girl for him. (5l)
c) Let you help him write anonymous love letters and poems to see
her reaction without needing to face her directly. If the
reaction is favorable, he can talk to her friends in the village
and arrange an "accidental" meeting. (5c)
24. Armsmaster Festil is relating the story of a great king he knew in
a faraway land whose inventors created a wondrous balloon of such
size, it could transport dozens of people through the air to any
place they chose. If you were this king, he asks you, how would
you use this remarkable balloon? Would you:
a) Explore regions previously impossible or extremely dangerous to
visit by land. (5l)
b) Keep the balloon a secret, saving it for surprise attacks or
defense in a time of war. (5c)
c) Commission the inventor to create dozens of these 'balloons' in
hopes of making a travel system across your realm that will
speed up transportation time and the exchange of ideas. (5v)
25. There is a lot of heated discussion at the local tavern over a
group of people called 'Telepaths'. They have been hired by
certain City-State kings. Rumor has it these Telepaths read a
person's mind and tell their lord whether a follower is telling
the truth or not. You believe:
a) That this is a terrible practice. A person's thoughts are
his own and no one, not even a king, has the right to make
such an invasion into another human's mind. (5c)
b) Loyal followers to the King have nothing to fear from
a Telepath. It is important to have a method of finding
assassins and spies before it is too late. (5v)
c) In these times, it is a necessary evil. Although you do
not necessarily like the idea, a Telepath could have certain
advantages during a time of war or in finding someone
innocent of a crime. (5l)
26. You are told that a young man has been caught by the village
guards and accused of murder. Apparently, his brother was killed
by a group of four ruffians in a local tavern, and in his grief,
the young man tracked each of them down and murdered them. Upon
reflection, you believe that:
a) The young man acted honorably in avenging his brother's
death. The village lord should let him go free. (5v)
b) Even as you sympathize with the young man, vigilante
law cannot be tolerated if there is to be peace. (5l)
c) The young man's only mistake was getting caught while
exacting vengance. For that, he now must accept whatever
fate has in store for him. (5c)
27. One night, walking home, you are attacked by a young man you know
from Armsmaster Festil's class. You defend yourself ably and knock
him unconscious. While he is out, you:
a) Tie him up, intending to interrogate him later when he
wakes up. You want to know why he attacked you. You can
then turn him into the Armsmaster at your leisure. (5l)
b) Slit his throat. You know him from class, and think he would
have done the same had your positions been reversed. (5c)
c) Leave him with a visible scar, the knowledge of his defeat
at your hands and the visible reminder punishment enough for
one who has resorted to such dishonorable tactics. (5v)
28. Your father delights in telling you stories of his travels in his
youth. In one memorable tale, he tells you about a primitive island
he visited where a young child was sacrificed once a year to appease
Arius, the God of Fire. Whenever the natives neglected the
sacrifice, the island volcano would erupt, killing hundreds of
villagers. You immediately tell your father:
a) You do not believe in any such Volcano God. Civilized men
should intervene, find the natural cause behind the
eruptions, and stop the sacrifices. (5l)
b) The God Arius must be evil to demand child sacrifice. The
villagers should find some way to combat this God, instead of
just giving in to his demands. (5v)
c) It is tragic, but the death of one small child is preferable
to that of many villagers. If it works, they should keep the
tradition. Gods are not to be toyed with. (5c)
29. Armsmaster Festil introduces a new student to the class - a small,
awkward boy named Tys who does not seem to have any natural
talent at all. The class is divided into two sides for a mock
battle and, as one of the 'generals', you are to assign your
soldiers to positions. Tys is one of your men. You decide to:
a) Put Tys at the frontline with the other fighters,
rationalizing that in any realistic battle, he would
probably be a casualty anyway, and that there must be
some sacrifices. (5l)
b) Use Tys as a scout, rationalizing that because of his
small size he would probably be good at sneaking in and
gathering information on the enemy. (5c)
c) Assign Tys to several posts during the course of the
battle, staying near and helping him so he can gain
valuable experience and improve. (5v)
30. Your mother is terribly ill and you have been sent with a few
gold pieces to buy some rare, medicinal herbs for her. As you
reach the door to the apothecary's, you realize there is a hole
in your purse and all the gold has fallen out. Do you:
a) Enter the store, tell the apothecary your dilemma, and
promise on your honor to pay him back for the herbs your
mother so desperately needs. (5l)
b) Attempt to steal the herbs from the apothecary's. You
know the old man who works in the store will not be able
to catch you, and your mother lies sick. (5c)
c) Run back home and admit the loss, hoping that your father will
have more gold. You know you'll be punished, but you will neither
be in debt to the apothecary, nor will you be a thief. (5v)
31. A boat you are in is suddenly caught in a tremendous whirlpool.
As the current reaches an impossible velocity, the little boat
begins springing leaks and starts to sink under the vortex.
You can see no way out that does not promise death, so you:
a) Pick up a bucket and begin bailing furiously, hoping to
keep the boat afloat just a few more seconds. (5l)
b) Sit back and accept your fate, choosing to die with a sense
of decorum and nobility, not as a commoner who fears the
unknown. (5v)
c) Dive into the churning current. You may only be hastening
your own death, but at least you are doing something. (5c)
32. You're hunting in the King's Hunt, a contest in which the best
hunter will win riches enough to live comfortably for the rest
of his or her life. You track a white stag many of you had
shot at earlier. You are alone as you examine the stag and
recognize the arrow as one fired from your friend's bow.
As you retrieve the arrow for closer examination you hear
your friends arrive. Do you:
a) Claim to have fired the arrow that hit the stag, thus
gaining the honor for the kill? (5c)
b) Show the others the arrow and proclaim your friend the
archer of the day? (5v)
c) Suggest dividing the prize, reasoning that although
your friend's arrow brought down the hart, all of you were
instrumental in the tracking and the kill? (5l)
33. One month after Tales and Tallows, you look at the horde of treats
you have collected and find lots of brandied plums, a treat you
particularly dislike. You know your younger sister likes them.
Do you:
a) Give her all your brandied plums? (5v)
b) Trade the brandied plums for something she does not
really like but you do? (5l)
c) Pretend that they are excellent brandied plums and see
if she will give up something really good in exchange? (5c)
34. Your cousin has given you a very embarassing nickname and, even
worse, likes to call you it in front of your friends. You have
asked him to stop, but he finds it very amusing to watch you
blush. What do you do?:
a) Make up an even more embarassing nickname for him and
use it constantly until he learns his lesson. (5l)
b) Make up a story that makes your nickname a badge of honor
instead of something humiliating. (5c)
c) Beat up your cousin, then tell him that if he ever calls
you that nickname again, you will bloody him worse that this
time. (5v)
35. Othisa, a friend, has been beat by a boy several years
older than either you or her. She asks for your help. Are
you more inclined to:
a) Gather a bunch of friends together and ambush the boy,
teaching him a lesson about bullying. (5c)
b) Tell Othisa to avoid the bully - no reason to make
things worse than they are. (5l)
c) Challenge the older boy, knowing that you will probably take
a beating, but confident that if you do it enough times, he will
move on to pick on someone who is an easier target. (5v)
36. Your parents are having a party for several relatives. While
helping around the house, you see your cousin slip into
a darkened room. Curious, you follow and discover him slipping
a silver candlestick into his jacket. He is an honorable boy,
but you know his family has suffered some recent financial
hardship. He has not seen you yet, do you:
a) Clear your throat and tell him to put the candlestick
back, reassuring him that your parents can help him if
his family is in trouble, but he should not resort
to stealing. (5l)
b) Close the door behind you and say nothing. Your family can
live without the candlestick, but your cousin's family
obviously cannot. (5v)
c) Treat him like any other burgler. Lock him in the room
and call for your father. If he chooses to be merciful
because of your cousin's poverty, that is his decision.
It is your father's candlestick, after all. (5c)
37. While exploring the woods with two other adventurers, you come
across a small, abandoned hut that seems to have once belonged to
a mage. Looking through the window, you see the remains of
a laboratory, many potions and scrolls still on the shelves. A
fighter named Geotina, who thinks you a cowardly sort, suggests
breaking into the shack and exploring. Another fighter named
Hunard suggests going to town to find out more information.
You advise:
a) Going into town. They are more familiar with the area and
may have important information about this hut and the
surrounding area. (5l)
b) Breaking into the shack, but leaving one person on
the outside in case something goes wrong. You should
investigate new things, not run away from them. (5v)
c) Daring Geotina to go in first. If there is a trap, she
can trip it, then you and Hunard can go in and explore
at your leisure. (5c)
38. It is a particularly grueling class with Armsmaster Festil. He
has been unreasonably demanding on everyone, including you. His
criticisms seem to border on abuse, and it seems he has no
positive comments to make. He turns to berate you at the end of
class, and over his shoulder, you see some classmates put an
aggressive but non-poisonous snake in Festil's hand sack.
You would:
a) Do nothing. The great Armsmaster needs a dose of humility
and this might be a good way of paying him back for all
the misery he has put you through today. (5c)
b) Tell Festil you saw a snake creep into his hand sack,
but do not tell him what your classmates did. No
reason to get anyone in even further trouble. (5l)
c) Immediately tell Festil what the classmates did. There
is no excuse for treating a seasoned fighter like him
with disrespect, regardless of his treatment to you
that particular day. (5v)
39. Because you expressed interest, Armsmaster Festil told you a
few hints about recognizing magical weaponry. Later you are
practicing archery with a few friends. One boy who was never
a strong archer has become something of a sharpshooter. You
suddenly realize that he is using magical arrows.
What do you do?:
a) Tell the others about the arrows. In a friendly
archery match, using magical arrows is cheating. (5v)
b) Tell your friend you noticed that he was using magical
arrows, and if he doesn't get you some, you will tell
the Armsmaster and the others the reason behind his
improvement. (5c)
c) Say nothing. If you have a need for magical arrows
you can always mention something to him later. After all,
magic is not really a cheat, it is a different skill. (5l)
40. Practicing alone, you develop a new fighting style you are very
excited about. When you mention it to Armsmaster Festil, he tells
you it would never work in practical combat. Do you:
a) Use the new style in the middle of a class spar.
When it works, Festil will be forced to admit its
practicality or give a reason for not accepting it. (5c)
b) Keep asking Festil questions about it, focusing on
details of the form to find his objection. Eventually
he will have to give a more specific criticism. (5l)
c) Accept his word without question. Armsmaster Festil has
been fighting since your grandfather's day. He knows a
flawed style when he sees it, and it is better not to
waste his or your time asking why. (5v)