Select the line that best supports the theme greed can prompt bad decisions.
"King Midas returned my beloved teacher to me, / so I rewarded him with a wish—whatever he wanted would be." (Lines 1–2)
"Midas cried, 'Give my fingers a golden touch! / Then, I shall have a gilded kingdom and such.'" (Lines 3–4)
"I tried to make him see the err of his choice, / but he would not heed the caution in my voice." (Lines 4–5)
"Yet, maybe if I had put up more of a fight and a fret, / then I wouldn't have to live with all this regret." (Lines 15–16)
Answer:
"Midas cried, 'Give my fingers a golden touch! / Then, I shall have a gilded kingdom and such.'" (Lines 3–4)
Step-by-step explanation:
Greed is simply the intense desire or obsession for something which is usually money, power, or both.
Midas showed his greed in Lines 3-4 when he chose that anything his fingers touched became golden by thinking that he would be surrounded with precious gold without realizing that anyone he touched will also turn to gold. His greed led him to make that bad decision that ruined his life.