Two
The count of Monte Christo Starts out with 4. Dantes arrives home only to find that on his wedding night to the Gorgeous Mercedes, he is arrested for something he did not do. He cannot read and didn't know what he was doing when he agreed to deliver something that would label him a traitor (of sorts). This is exposition, the one on the far left.
The second one (rising action) is the fifth one. Three "friends" and a corrupt judge have Dantes arrested.
The climax is number three. In prison he learns to read and write. He also learns of a huge fortune that will help him bring his enemies down.
The first one is falling action. He reunites the lost lovers.
The second one is the resolution. He leaves Italy/France never to be seen again.
Three
Left Hand Column
Top
Don't. Never critique someone's work that way. It is neither polite nor helpful. It is merely blunt.
Middle
Absolutely the right way to do a response. Do
Bottom
The bottom is a great comment as well. Speak well of a work when you can.
Right Hand Column
Top
Do. It is just the way you should write something that is a comment that needs to be made. It commends something that makes the conclusion a good one.
Middle
This one is kind of iffy. It's not impolite, but it's not very helpful either. Quotations where and for what purpose? I would say don't but it's not clear cut. You might get this one wrong.
Bottom
Definitely a don't. How? What's wrong? and the tone is terrible.