Read Text 2 and answer the question from.
TEXT 2
The merry adventures of Robin Hood
By Howard Pyle
[1] I tell you plainly that if you go farther you will be scandalized by seeing good, sober folks of
real history so frisk and caper in gay colors and motley that you would not know them but for
the names tagged to them. Here is a stout, lusty fellow with a quick temper, yet none so ill
for all that, who goes by the name of Henry II. Here is a fair, gentle lady before whom all the
[5] others bow and call her Queen Eleanor. Here is a fat rogue of a fellow, dressed up in rich
robes of a clerical kind, that all the good folk call my Lord Bishop of Hereford. Here is a
certain fellow with a sour temper and a grim look-- the worshipful, the Sheriff of Nottingham.
And here, above all, is a great, tall, merry fellow that roams the greenwood and joins in
homely sports, and sits beside the Sheriff at merry feast, which same beareth the name of
[10] the proudest of the Plantagenets--Richard of the Lion's Heart. Beside these are a whole host
of knights, priests, nobles, burghers, yeomen, pages, ladies, lasses, landlords, beggars,
peddlers, and what not, all living the merriest of merry lives, and all bound by nothing but a
few odd strands of certain old ballads (snipped and clipped and tied together again in a score
of knots) which draw these jocund fellows here and there, singing as they go.
The correct synonyms of the following words: “stout” (line 3), “lusty” (line 3), “sour” (line 7), “lasses” (line 11) and “yeomen” (line 11) are respectively: