Read the following passage from The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle: There I became instantly agog at the mass of ships that lay before us, masts and spars thick as the bristles on a brush. Everywhere I looked I saw mountains of rare goods piled high. Bales of silk and tobacco. Chests of tea! A parrot! A monkey! Oh yes, the smell of the sea was intoxicating to one who knew little more than the smell of the trim cut lawns and the fields of the Barrington School. Excerpts from The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle, copyright © 1990 by Avi. Used by permission of Brandt and Hochman Literary Agents, Inc. All rights reserved. Which of the following images from the passage fits into the motif of “regularity and order”? the “trim cut lawns” of the Barrington School the “mountains of rare goods” that crowd the docks masts and spars “thick as the bristles on a brush” the intoxicating “smell of the sea”