Step 1: Identify authors
- Mansfield Park (1814) — written by Jane Austen. While published under the simple attribution "By a Lady," Austen did not openly use her name. This is a form of pseudonymous/anonymous authorship common for women in her era.
- Middlemarch (1871–72) — written by Mary Ann Evans, who adopted the pen name George Eliot to be taken seriously in a male-dominated literary field.
Step 2: Eliminate distractors
(A) Men in exile — false; both were women.
(B) Political prisoners — not true for Austen or Eliot.
(C) Written by children — false; both were accomplished adult authors.
Thus, both shared the commonality of being women novelists who concealed their identity under pseudonyms/anonymous authorship.
\[
\boxed{\text{Mansfield Park = Jane Austen (as "A Lady"); Middlemarch = George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans)}}
\]
| a | Phileas Fogg and Jean Passepartout | i | William Shakespeare |
| b | Don Quixote and Sancho Panza | ii | Jules Verne |
| c | Candide and Pangloss | iii | Miguel de Cervantes |
| d | Dogberry and Verges | iv | Voltaire |