1. It Was During the .Period That England Came to Be Called 'The Nest of Singing Birds'

1. It Was During the .Period That England Came to Be Called 'The Nest of Singing Birds'

<p>Quiz 1</p><p>1. It was during the ……….period that England came to be called 'The Nest of Singing Birds'.</p><p> a) Elizabethan</p><p> b) Neoclassical </p><p> c) Pre-Romantic</p><p> d) Romantic</p><p>2. Two great Elizabethan poets were ………………</p><p> a) Donne and Herbert</p><p> b) Pope and Dryden </p><p> c) Wordsworth and Coleridge</p><p> d) Sidney and Spenser</p><p>3. In his Apology for Poetry, …….. defends poetry on the ground of its unique power to teach.</p><p> a) Sidney</p><p> b) Spenser</p><p> c) Shakespeare</p><p> d) Milton</p><p>4. With The Faerie Queene, …….. achieved the central poem of the </p><p>Elizabethan period.</p><p> a) Ben Jonson b) Spenser</p><p> c) Sidney</p><p> d) Donne</p><p>5.The sonnet flourished greatly in the……………..period.</p><p> a) Elizabethan</p><p> b) Neoclassical </p><p> c) Pre-Romantic</p><p> d) Romantic</p><p>6. The earliest sonnets are attributed to an Italian poet called …………</p><p> a) Spenser</p><p> a) Shakespeare</p><p> b) Sidney</p><p> c) Petrarch</p><p>8. The ……….period was characterized by an extreme spirit of adventure, aestheticism and materialism</p><p> a) Elizabethan</p><p> b) Neoclassical</p><p> c) Pre-Romantic</p><p> d) Romantic</p><p>QUIZ 2</p><p>9. ‘I Find No Peace’ is a poem written by……. a) William Shakespeare</p><p> b) George Herbert.</p><p> c) Robert Herrick.</p><p> d) Sir Thomas Wyatt</p><p>10. The main theme of ‘I Find No Peace’ is…………..</p><p> a) suffering in love.</p><p> b) death.</p><p> c) friendship.</p><p> d) happiness.</p><p>11. ‘I Find No Peace’is a poem which is mainly built on the use……</p><p> a) simile.</p><p> b) personification.</p><p> c) paradox.</p><p> d) hyperbole.</p><p>12. In ‘I ... freeze like ice', from ' I Find No Peace,’ there is an example of……..</p><p> a) personification.</p><p> b) metaphor.</p><p> c) pun.</p><p> d) simile. 13. In 'Nor letteth me live nor die at my device', from ‘I </p><p>Find No Peace', the consonant /l/ comes at the beginning of the words 'letteth' and 'live' giving an example of ……….</p><p> a) stress.</p><p> b) assonance.</p><p> c) consonance.</p><p> d) alliteration.</p><p>14. In 'And my delight is causer of this strife ', from ‘I Find </p><p>No Peace', the vowel /ai/ is repeated in the words 'my', </p><p>'delight' and 'strife', giving an example of ……….</p><p> a) assonance.</p><p> b) consonance</p><p> c) alliteration.</p><p> d) repetition.</p><p>QUIZ 3</p><p>15. ‘On My First Son’ is an example of …….poetry.</p><p> a) satirical b) elegiac c) pastoral d) descriptive. 16. ………is the main theme of ‘On My First Son’. a) The sense of loss and sorrow b) Loyalty c) Love d) The sense of delight and happiness</p><p>17. 'On My First Son' is an address from………. </p><p> a) a son to a father b) a father to a mother c) a father to a daughter d) a father to a son 18. In ‘Farewell, thou child of my right hand, and joy’, from 'On My First Son', the image is…….</p><p> a) simile b) apostrophe c) personification d) paradox. 19. ‘On My First Son’ is a poem written by……</p><p> a) Edmund Spenser.</p><p> b) Ben Jonson</p><p> c) William Wordsworth</p><p> d) Christopher Marlowe</p><p>20. In 'Farewell, thou child of my right hand, and joy:', from 'On My First Son', the underlined words show an example of:</p><p> a) assonance b) consonance</p><p> c) alliteration</p><p> d) stress</p><p>21. In 'To have so soone scap'd worlds, and fleshes rage' </p><p>', from 'On My First Son', the /s/ sound is repeated in the initial position of more than one word, and this technical device is called……………..</p><p> a) assonance</p><p> b) consonance</p><p> c) alliteration</p><p> d) stress</p><p>QUIZ 4</p><p>22. ' How like a winter hath my absence been ' is a poem written by………..</p><p> a) William Shakespeare</p><p> b) Ben Jonson</p><p> c) Sir Thomas Wyatt</p><p> d) Robert Herrick 23. 'How like a winter hath my absence been' is a poem in which the writer compares the separation from his beloved to…………. a) summer.</p><p> b) winter.</p><p> c) spring.</p><p> d) autumn.</p><p>24. The main theme of ‘How like a winter hath my absence been’ is……. a) summer.</p><p> b) winter.</p><p> c) separation from the beloved</p><p> d) autumn</p><p>25. ‘How like a winter hath my absence been’, is a poem which is mainly built on a….</p><p> a) metaphor</p><p> b) paradox</p><p> c) personification</p><p> d) simile</p><p>26. ‘How like a winter hath my absence been’ is a sonnet of 14 lines divided into……</p><p> a) an octave and a sestet.</p><p> b) three quatrains and a concluding couplet. c) a sestet and two quatrains.</p><p> d) two sestets and a concluding couplets.</p><p>27. In 'Like widow’d wombs after their lords’ decease', from‘How like a winter hath my absence been’, there is an example of……..</p><p> a) pun</p><p> b) hyberbole</p><p> c) simile</p><p> d) metaphor</p><p>QUIZ 5</p><p>28. ' one day I wrote her nam ' is a poem written by………..</p><p> a) Sir Philip Sidney b) John Milton c) John Donne d) Edmund Spenser 29. The image in '… but you shall live by fame, from ‘One </p><p>Day I Wrote Her </p><p>Name…’, is…………...</p><p> a) apostrophe. b) simile. c) personification. d) metaphor. 30. In ‘One Day I Wrote Her Name….’, the main theme is………..</p><p> a) the mortality of love</p><p> b) the end of love</p><p> c) the loss of love</p><p> d) the immortality of love</p><p>31. In ‘One Day I Wrote Her Name….’ the poet tells us that he has tried many times to write the name of his beloved in the sand, but the waves……….it.</p><p> a) keep </p><p> b) show </p><p> c) clarify</p><p> d) remove</p><p>32. In 'Our love shall live, and later life renew', from ‘One </p><p>Day I Wrote Her Name….’, the repetition of the sound /l/ in the initial position of more than one word gives an example of…………….</p><p> a) assonance</p><p> b) alliteration</p><p> c) consonance</p><p> d) stress QUIZ 6</p><p>33. The term 'metaphysical' refers to a style of ...poetry.</p><p> a) 15th Century </p><p> b) 16th Century </p><p> c) 17th Century </p><p> d) 18th Century.</p><p>34. …… was the most influential metaphysical poet.</p><p> a) John Donne</p><p> b) William Shakespeare</p><p> c) Edmund Spenser</p><p> d) Sir Philip Sidney</p><p>35.… poetry is described as the 'poetry of strong lines'.</p><p> a) Elizabethan</p><p> b) Neoclassical </p><p> c) Metaphysical </p><p> d) Romantic</p><p>36. Donne dedicated his Holy Sonnets to….…….</p><p> a) Henry Vaughn</p><p> b) Andrew Marvel</p><p> c) George Herbert d) His wife.</p><p>37. Metaphysical poets were fond of using……..….in their poems.</p><p> a) similes b) apostrophes. c) personifications d) conceits 38. Metaphysical poets reacted against the smooth and sweet tones of </p><p> much ……………. verse.</p><p> a) fourteenth b) fifteenth c) sixteenth d) seventeenth 39. A metaphysical poem often has …………….opening:</p><p> a) a common b) a conventional c) an unusual d) an ordinary</p><p>QUIZ 7</p><p>40. 'The Broken Heart' is a poem written by…………..</p><p> a) John Donne</p><p> b) William Shakespeare</p><p> c) Edmund Spenser d) Sir Thomas Wyatt.</p><p>41. In 'The Broken Heart', the speaker declares that any man who claims he has been in love for an hour is ……..</p><p> a) Wise.</p><p> b) clever.</p><p> c) sane.</p><p> d) mad.</p><p>42. In 'He swallows us and never chaws', from 'The </p><p>Broken Heart', the poet gives us an example of………….</p><p> a) simile b) personification c) paradox d) irony 43. The main idea of 'The Broken Heart' is that……. a) love surprises the heart. b) love satisfies the heart. c) love destroys the heart. d) love gives pleasure to the heart. 44. In 'If 'twere not so, what did become / Of my heart when I first saw thee?', from 'The Broken Heart', the image is…………. a) Apostrophe b) personification c) paradox d) metaphor QUIZ 8</p><p>45. Neo-Classicism appeared in the beginning of the…..century.</p><p> a) 18th </p><p> b) 17th </p><p> c) 16th </p><p> d) 15th</p><p>46. During the Neo-classical period, there was a belief in the power </p><p> of………...</p><p> a) feeling</p><p> b) sentiment</p><p> c) emotion</p><p> d) reason</p><p>47. ……… were the greatest poets of the neo-classical period.</p><p> a) Marlowe and Shakespeare</p><p> b) Pope and Dryden </p><p> c) Wordsworth and Coleridge</p><p> d) Donne and Herber</p><p>48. The neo-classical poets reacted against the tradition of the….……. a) Metaphysicals</p><p> b) Romans</p><p> c) Greecks</p><p> d) French</p><p>49. Pope and Dryden established a new school of poetry known as the </p><p>……….School of English poetry poems.</p><p> a) Elizabethan </p><p> b) Pre-Romantic</p><p> c) Romantic</p><p> d) Neoclassical</p><p>50. During the Neoclassical period, it was believed that human nature is </p><p>……………………</p><p> a) changing</p><p> b) unchanging</p><p> c) varying</p><p> d) different</p><p>51. It was important for neoclassical authors to focus on </p><p>………… a) generalities.</p><p> b) specifics. </p><p> c) details.</p><p> d) particulars.</p><p>52. The Neoclassical poets looked to the ………..writers for guidance and inspiration.</p><p> a) Italian </p><p> b) English</p><p> c) African</p><p> d) Greek and Roman</p><p>53. An Essay on Criticism was written by…………..</p><p> a) Pope</p><p> b) Dryden</p><p> c) Milton</p><p> d) Shakespeare</p><p>QUIZ 9</p><p>54. The Rape of the Lock is written by…………..</p><p> a) John Drydon</p><p> b) William Blake</p><p> c) John Milton d) Alexander Pope</p><p>55. ………is the main theme of The Rape of the Lock</p><p> a) Satire</p><p> b) Love</p><p> c) War</p><p> d) Friendship</p><p>56. The main figure of speech in The Rape of the Lock is </p><p>……….</p><p> a) apostrophe. b) hyperbole c) Personification d) simile 57. The Rape of the lock is…………..</p><p> a) a mock-epic b) a lyrical poem c) an elegy d) a war poem</p><p>58. One of Pope's…….persuaded him to write The Rape of the lock. a) sudents b) teachers c) brothers d) friends</p><p>QUIZ 10 59. Towards the end of the ……, poetry began to move away from the strict ideals of the neoclassical period to focus on sentiment and feelings.</p><p> a) 18th century b) 17th century c) 16th century d) 15th century.</p><p>60. Towards the end of the 18 th century, poetry began to move away from the strict ideals of the………….…period.</p><p> a) Elizabethan b) Metaphysical c) Neoclassical d) Pre-Romantic</p><p>61. Pre-Romantic poetry focused on………...</p><p> a) reason b) rules c) ancient classical models d) sentiment and feelings 62. The Pre-Romantic trend can be clearly seen in the handling of …………</p><p> a) nature b) old models c) experimental science d) reason and intellect 63. Night Thoughts is a poem written by….…….</p><p> a) Thomas Gray b) Edward Young c) James Thomson d) James Macpherson 64. …………….wrote four long poems on the seasons, </p><p>Winter, Summer, Spring, and Autumn, which were collected in a single volume in 1730.</p><p> a) Edward Young b) Thomas Gray c) James Thomson d) James Macpherson</p><p>65. ………….., the author of Elegy Written in a Country </p><p>Churchyard, was one of the most learned men in Europe in his day.</p><p> a) James Macpherson b) Thomas Gray c) James Thomson d) Edward Young 66. The Pre-Romantic poets looked to ……………..for inspiration. a) the ideals of order b) the Romans c) the Greeks d) nature</p><p>QUIZ 11</p><p>67. ' , from ‘Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard’ poem written by……….. a. Edmund Spenser b. Sir Thomas Wyatt c. Thomas Gray d. John Milton.</p><p>68. An elegy is a poem which laments ……. a) the dead. b) the poor c) the rich d) the past. 69. The main theme of ‘Elegy Written in a Country </p><p>Churchyard’ is…… a) love. b) betrayal. c) war. d) death.</p><p>70. The figure of speech in “'The Curfew tolls the knell of </p><p> parting day'”, from ‘Elegy Written in a Country </p><p>Churchyard’, is a) Simile b) Personification c) Paradox d) Hyperbole</p><p>71. The repetition of the two consonants /p/ and /w/ in ' </p><p>The plowman homeward plods his weary way' , from </p><p>‘Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard’, gives an </p><p> example of ………. a) alliteration b) assonance c) stress d) intonation 72. ‘Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard’ is a poem </p><p> written in…………. a) couplets b) tercets c) quatrains d) sestets.</p><p>73. ‘Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard’ has a </p><p> very………tone. a) happy b) sad c) merry d) nice</p><p>QUIZ 12</p><p>74. ‘The Little Black Boy’ is a poem written by……… a) William Blake. b) George Herbert. c) John Donne. d) Sir Philip Sidney.</p><p>75. The main theme of ‘The Little Black Boy’ is ………. a) The discrimination of human beings</p><p> b) The separation of human beings</p><p> c) The differentiation of human beings</p><p> d) The equality of human beings</p><p>76. In 'That we may learn to bear the beams of love;'’’, </p><p> from ‘The Little Black Boy’, the image is……</p><p> a) metaphor.</p><p> b) simile.</p><p> c) allusion.</p><p> d) irony.</p><p>77. In ‘White as an angel is the English child', from, ‘The Little </p><p>Black Boy’, the poet gives us an example of……..</p><p> a) simile.</p><p> b) pun</p><p> c) apostrophe</p><p> d) metaphor</p><p>78. In ‘The Little Black Boy’, the speaker is an……..child</p><p> a) English </p><p> b) European </p><p> c) African </p><p> d) American </p>

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