How does the story of the prince in paragraph 6 contribute to the development of ideas in
the passage?
A. The story supports Thoreau's idea that one can see the "reality of things when
one looks past superficial circumstances.
B. The story supports Thoreau's argument that superficial titles are just
distractions and have nothing to do with who a person really is.
C. Thoreau praises the story because the prince's childhood of living in the forest
shows how going to the woods in order to "live deliberately" can be beneficial.
D. Thoreau uses the story to argue that what one thinks to be the truth can actually
be false, and so there is no such thing as "reality."