单项选择题

One thing almost everyone is agreed on, including Americans, is that they place a very high valuation upon success. Success does not necessarily mean material rewards, but recognition of some sort preferably measurable. If a boy turns out to be a preacher (传道者) instead of a businessman, that’s all right. But the bigger his church is, the more successful he is judged to be.
A good many things contributed to this accent on success. There was the Puritan(清教徒的) belief in the virtue of work, both for its own sake and because the rewards it brought were regarded as signs of God’s love. There was the richness of opportunity in a land waiting to be settled. There was the lack of a settled society with fixed ranks and classes, so that a man was certain to rise through achievement.
There was the determination of an immigrant to gain in the new world what had been denied to him in the old, and on tile part of his children an urge to throw off the immigrant onus(负担)by still more success and still more rise in a fluid and classless society. Brothers did not compete with in the family for the favor of the parents as in Europe, but worked hard for success in the outer world, along paths of their own choosing.

It is suggested in the last paragraph that()

A.children were urged to achieve success in the fluid and classless society.
B.children were determined to throw off their immigrant identities
C.children tended to compete for the favor of their parent.
D.children worked hard for success along paths chosen by their parent.