Which excerpts from Queen Elizabeth's Response to Parliament's Request That She Marry rely on a rhetorical appeal to logos to persuade her audience that even if she produced an heir it would not guarantee England’s prosperity or safety? Check all that apply.
1) I give you all my hearty thanks for the good zeal and loving care you seem to have.
2) You may well assure yourselves, my meaning is not to determine any thing.
3) I always continued in this determination, although my youth and words may seem to some hardly to agree together, yet is it most true.
4) The realm shall not remain destitute of any heir that may be a fit governour, and peradventure more beneficial to the realm.
5) For though I be never so careful of your well-doing, and mind ever so to be, yet may my issue grow out of kind, and become perhaps ungracious.

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4) The realm shall not remain destitute of any heir that may be a fit governour, and peradventure more beneficial to the realm.
5) For though I be never so careful of your well-doing, and mind ever so to be, yet may my issue grow out of kind, and become perhaps ungracious.

The correct answers are 4) The realm shall not remain destitute of any heir that may be a fit governour, and peradventure more beneficial to the realm. 5) For though I be never so careful of your well-doing, and mind ever so to be, yet may my issue grow out of kind, and become perhaps ungracious.

These two statements appeal to logos because Elizabeth is trying to convince her audience using logic or the reason. These are elaborated arguments to explain her motives.

The other two ways to appeal to audiences are Pathos y Ethos. Pathos is the appeal to emotion to convince audiences. Ethos is the appeal to the image or reputation of the speaker to convince an audience.

So yes, the excerpts are: 4) The realm shall not remain destitute of any heir that may be a fit governour, and peradventure more beneficial to the realm. 5) For though I be never so careful of your well-doing, and mind ever so to be, yet may my issue grow out of kind, and become perhaps ungracious.