What was the primary reason the young lawyer was sent to New Mullion?
- A) To investigate a crime
- B) To serve a summons
- C) To buy property
- D) To find a missing person
How did the young lawyer initially perceive the village of New Mullion?
- A) As a thriving city
- B) As a charming, picturesque town
- C) As a dull, unimpressive place
- D) As a dangerous and hostile environment
What was the lawyer's first impression of the hack driver?
- A) Suspicious and unfriendly
- B) Trustworthy and friendly
- C) Arrogant and dismissive
- D) Wealthy and influential
What was the hack driver’s real identity?
- A) Oliver Lutkins
- B) A hired hand of Lutkins
- C) A local sheriff
- D) A farmer from the nearby village
Which location did the hack driver first take the lawyer to in the search for Lutkins?
- A) The local inn
- B) Lutkins' house
- C) Fritz’s shop
- D) The courthouse
What reason did the hack driver give for Lutkins’ absence from Fritz’s shop?
- A) He was hiding from the law
- B) He was visiting his mother
- C) He was playing poker
- D) He was working on his farm
What was the lawyer's final realization about the hack driver?
- A) That he had been a helpful guide
- B) That he was Lutkins himself
- C) That he was a government official
- D) That he had been cheated out of money
Why did the people of New Mullion assist in deceiving the lawyer?
- A) Out of loyalty to Lutkins
- B) Because they disliked outsiders
- C) They were unaware of the deception
- D) They were paid to deceive him
What did the lawyer decide about practising law in New Mullion after his experience?
- A) He was eager to return
- B) He was hesitant and reconsidered
- C) He vowed never to return
- D) He decided to take revenge on Lutkins
How does the story "The Hack Driver" primarily convey its humour?
- A) Through exaggerated characters
- B) Through wordplay and puns
- C) Through the irony of the lawyer’s situation
- D) Through slapstick comedy
Which emotion best describes the lawyer’s feelings towards the hack driver during the search?
- A) Fear
- B) Anger
- C) Admiration
- D) Suspicion
What does Lutkins' behaviour throughout the story suggest about his character?
- A) He is honest but misunderstood
- B) He is deceptive and manipulative
- C) He is fearful of the law
- D) He is a victim of circumstance
How does the lawyer's inexperience play a role in the story?
- A) It makes him more suspicious of others
- B) It leads him to underestimate Lutkins
- C) It causes him to solve the case quickly
- D) It leads to his decision to quit law
Which of the following themes is most prominent in "The Hack Driver"?
- A) Justice and the law
- B) Deception and gullibility
- C) Friendship and loyalty
- D) Wealth and poverty
How does the lawyer’s attitude towards his job change by the end of the story?
- A) He becomes more confident in his abilities
- B) He becomes disillusioned with his profession
- C) He decides to pursue a different career
- D) He becomes more passionate about serving justice
What lesson does the lawyer learn by the end of the story?
- A) To trust everyone
- B) To be more skeptical and discerning
- C) That the law always prevails
- D) That people in small towns are simple and honest
What role do the other villagers play in the deception of the lawyer?
- A) They actively conspire with Lutkins
- B) They are unaware of the lawyer’s purpose
- C) They warn the lawyer about Lutkins
- D) They try to help the lawyer but fail
Why did the lawyer enjoy his day in New Mullion despite not finding Lutkins?
- A) He enjoyed the rural scenery
- B) He was amused by the hack driver’s stories
- C) He was glad to escape his office work
- D) He believed he was making progress in the case
How might the story be different if the lawyer had not been so trusting?
- A) He would have found Lutkins immediately
- B) He would have been less successful in his career
- C) He would have been less likely to enjoy the day
- D) He might have avoided being deceived
What is the significance of the title "The Hack Driver"?
- A) It reflects the lawyer's profession
- B) It misleads the reader about the true nature of the story
- C) It highlights the importance of transportation in the plot
- D) It reveals the hack driver's central role in the story
Answer Keys:
- C. Summons
- D. He was actually Oliver Lutkins
- B. Bill Magnuson
- C. At a farmhouse on Gustaff’s farm
- D. Deceived the lawyer
- A. Lutkins had deceived him
- C. He was naive and inexperienced
- B. He failed to realize that the hack driver was Lutkins himself
- A. Lutkins’ mother
- D. Summons to court
- B. He enjoyed the countryside and the people
- C. They did not give any information about Lutkins
- A. The lawyer’s colleague
- C. He found out he had been deceived by Lutkins
- B. He was impressed by Lutkins’ knowledge of the village
- D. Bill pretended to help the lawyer but actually misled him
- A. The lawyer’s naivety and trust in Bill
- C. Lutkins was Bill, the hack driver
- D. A little less smart and knowledgeable than he thought
- C. Lutkins and his mother played the lawyer for a fool