MCQs Literature
MCQs Literature
MCQs Literature
1. Which poem ends 'I shall but love thee better after death'?
a. How do I love thee
b. Ode to a Grecian urn
c. In faith I do not love thee with mine eyes
d. Let me not to the marriage of true minds
2. Which poet is considered a national hero in Greece?
a. John keats
b. Lord Byron
c. Solan
d. Sappho
3. Which kind of poem is Edward Lear associated with?
a. Nature
b. Epics
c. Sonnets
d. Nonsense
4. In Coleridges poem 'The rime of the Ancient Mariner where were the
three gallants going?
a. A funeral
b. A wedding
c. Market
d. To the races
5. Harold Nicholson described which poet as 'Very yellow and glum. Perfect
manners'?
a. e. e. Cummings
b. T. S. Elliot
c. John Greenleaf Whittier
d. Walt Whitman
6. What was strange about Emily Dickinson?
a. She rarely left home
b. She wrote in code
c. She never attempted to publish her poetry
d. She wrote her poems in invisible ink
7. Rupert Brooke wrote his poetry during which conflict?
a. Boer War
b. Second World War
c. Korean War
d. First World War
8. Which Poet Laureate wrote about a church mouse?
a. Betjeman
b. Hughes
c. Marvel
d. Larkin
9. Which American writer published 'A brave and startling truth' in 1996
a. Robert Hass
b. Jessica Hagdorn
c. Maya Angelou
d. Michael Palmer
10. Who wrote about the idyllic 'Isle of Innis free'?
a. Dylan Thomas
b. Ezra Pound
c. W. B. Yeats
d. e. e. cummings
11. A pattern of accented and unaccented syllables in lines of poetry
1.
rhyme scheme
2.
meter
3.
alliteration
alliteration
2.
onomatopoeia
3.
rhyme
personification
2.
onomatopoeia
3.
alliteration
rhyme
2.
onomatopoeia
3.
alliteration
metaphor
2.
simile
3.
personification
metaphor
2.
simile
3.
personification
alliteration
2.
simile
3.
onomatopoeia
imagery
2.
personification
3.
metaphor
19. A poem that tells a story with plot, setting, and characters
1.
lyric
2.
free verse
3.
narrative
lyric
2.
free verse
3.
narrative
lyric
2.
free verse
3.
narrative
Prof. A. R. Somroo
03339971417
c. Marianne Moore
d. Laura Jackson
26. In his poem Kipling said 'If you can meet with triumph and . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . '?
a. Glory
b. Ruin
c. Disaster
d. victory
27. Which of the following is not a literary device used for aesthetic effect in
poetry?
a. Assonance
b. Onomatopoeia
c. Rhyme
d. Grammar
28. True or false: Writing predates poetry.
a. True
b. False
29. What is the earliest surviving European poem?
a. The Homeric epic
b. The Gilgamesh epic
c. The Deluge epic
d. The Hesiod ode
30. Which of the following is not a poetic tradition?
a. The Epic
b. The Comic
c. The Occult
d. The Tragic
31. What is the study of poetry's meter and form called?
a. Prosody
b. Potology
c. Rheumatology
d. Scansion
32. Shakespeare composed much of his plays in what sort of verse?
a. Alliterative verse
b. Sonnet form
c. Iambic pentameter
d. Dactylic hexameter
33. Which poet invented the concept of the variable foot in poetry?
a. William Carlos Williams
b. Emily Dickinson
c. Gerard Manly Hopkins
d. Robert Frost
34. Who wrote this famous line: 'Shall I compare thee to a summer's day/
Thou art more lovely and more temperate'
a. TS Eliot
b. Lord Tennyson
c. Charlotte Bronte
d. Shakespeare
35. From what century does the poetic form the folk ballad date?
a. The 12th
b. The 14th
c. The 17th
d. The 19th
36. From which of Shakespeare's plays is this famous line: 'Did my heart love
til now?/ Forswear it, sight/ For I never saw a true beauty until this night'
a. A Midsummer Night's Dream
b. Hamlet
c. Othello
d. Romeo and Juliet
37. What is a poem called whose first letters of each line spell out a word?
a. Alliterative
b. Epic
c. Acrostic
d. Haiku
38. Auld Lang Syne is a famous poem by whom?
a. Sir Walter Scott
b. William Butler Yeats
c. Henry Longfellow
d. Robert Burns
39. How has Stephen Dunn been described in 'the Oxford Companion to 20th
Century Poetry?
a. A poet of middleness
b. capturing a sense of spiritual marooness
c. One of the leading prairie poets
d. Has some distinction as a critic
40. 'The Cambridge school' refers to a group who emerged when?
a. The 1900's
b. The 1960's
c. The 1920's
d. The 1930's
41. Margaret Atwood was born in which Canadian city?
a. Vancouver
b. Toronto
c. Ottowa
d. Montreal
42. Which of the following words describe the prevailing attitude of HighModern Literature?
a.Skeptical
b.Authoritative
c.Impressionistic
d.Confident
e.Both a & c
43. Which Welsh poet wrote "Under Milk Wood?"
a.Anthony Hopkins
b.Richard Burton
c.Tom Jones
d.Dylan Thomas
c.Samson Agonistes
d.Divorce Tracts
54. William Shakespeare was born in the year:
a.1564
b.1544
c.1578
d.1582
55. Which of the following is not a Shakespeare tragedy?
a.Titus Andronicus
b.Othello
c.Macbeth
d.Hamlet
e.None of the above
56. Who wrote 'The Winter's Tale?'
a.George Bernard Shaw
b.John Dryden
c.Christopher Marlowe
d.William Shakespeare
67. Who has defined 'poetry' as a fundamental creative act using languages?
a. H. W. Longfellow
b. Ralph Waldo Emerson
c. Dylan Thomas
d. William Wordsworth
68. What is a sonnet?
a. A poem of six lines
b. A poem of eight lines
c. A poem of twelve lines
d. A poem of fourteen lines
69. What is study of meter, rhythm and intonation of a poem called as?
a. Prosody
b. Allegory
c. Scansion
d. Assonance
70. Which figure of speech is it when a statement is exaggerated in a poem?
a. Onomatopoeia
b. Metonymy
c. Alliteration
d. Hyperbole
71. There was aware of her true love, at length come riding by - This is a
couplet from the Bailiff's Daughter of Islington. What figure of speech is used
by the poet?
a. Metaphor
b. Synecdoche
c. Euphemism
d. Irony
72. Which culture is known for their long, rhymed poetic verses known as
Qasidas?
a. Hindu
b. Celtic
c. Arabic
d. Aramaic
73. Complete this Shakespearean line - Let me not to the marriage of true
minds bring:
a. Impediments
b. Inconveniences
c. Worries
d. Troubles
74. Which of the following is a Japanese poetic form?
a. Jintishi
b. Villanelle
c. Ode
d. Tanka
75. What is the title of the poem that begins thus - 'What is this life, if full of
care, we have no time to stand and stare'?
a. Comfort
b. Leisure
c. Relaxation
d. Tranquility
76. Which of the following is not an English poet (i. e. from England)?
a. Victor Hugo
b. Alexander Pope
c. John Milton
d. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
77. Who was often called as the Romantic Poet as most of his poems
revolved around nature?
a. William Blake
b. William Shakespeare
c. William Morris
d. William Wordsworth
78. What is a funny poem of five lines called?
a. Quartet
b. Limerick
c. Sextet
d. Palindrome
c. Cuba
d. Toronto
82. Ted Hughes was married to which American poetess?
a. Carolyn Kizer
b. Mary Oliver
c. Sylvia Plath
d. Marianne Moore
83. How old was Rupert Brooke at the time of his death?
a. 24
b. 31
c. 21
d. 28
84. In what form did Dylan Thomas's 'Under Milk Wood' first become known?
a. Book of poetry
b. A radio play
c. A stage play
d. a short film
85. The magazine 'Contemporary Poetry and Prose' was inspired by which
exhibition?
a. The Festival of Britain
b. The Surrealist Exhibition
c. People of the 20th Century
d. Drawing the 20th CEntury
86. Why did 'Poetry Quarterly' cease publication in 1953?
a. Owner convicted of fraud
b. Fall in Sales
c. Rise in taxation on magazines
d. Shortage of paper
87. Aldous Huxley was a poet, but was better known as what?
a. Politician
b. Dramatist
c. Novelist
d. Architect
88. Of which poet was it said 'Even if he's not a great poet, he's certainly a
great something'?
a. Elliot
b. Kipling
c. Cummings
d. Brooke
1.which of these is magnum opus of chaucer?
A. Troilus and criseyde
b. House of fame
c. The canterbury tales
d. Parliament of fowls.
89. Where were the pilgrims going in the canterbury tales?
A. To the shrine of st. Peter at canterbury cathedral
b. To the shrine of saint thomas becket at canterbury cathedral
c) Spanish
d) Hungarian
e) Danish
99. Which hero made his earliest appearance in Celtic literature before
becoming a staple subject in French, English, and German literatures?
a) Beowulf
b) Arthur
c) Caedmon
d) Augustine of Canterbury
e) Alfred
100. Toward the close of which century did English replace French as the
language of conducting business in Parliament and in court of law?
a) tenth
b) eleventh
c) twelfth
d) thirteenth
e) fourteenth
101. Which king began a war to enforce his claims to the throne of France in
1336?
a) Henry II
b) Henry III
c) Henry V
d) Louis XIV
e) Edward III
102. Who would be called the English Homer and father of English poetry?
a) Bede
b) Sir Thomas Malory
c) Geoffrey Chaucer
d) Caedmon
e) John Gower
103. What was vellum?
a) parchment made of animal skin
b) the service owed to a lord by his peasants ("villeins")
c) unrhymed iambic pentameter
d) an unbreakable oath of fealty
e) a prized ink used in the illumination of prestigious manuscripts
104. Only a small proportion of medieval books survive, large numbers
having been destroyed in:
a) the Anglo-Saxon Conquest beginning in the 1450s.
b) the Norman Conquest of 1066.
c) the Peasant Uprising of 1381.
d) the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 1530s.
e) the wave of contempt for manuscripts that followed the beginning of
printing in 1476.
105. What is the first extended written specimen of Old English?
a) Boethius's Consolidation of Philosophy
b) Saint Jerome's translation of the Bible
c) Malory's Morte Darthur
d) Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People
e) a code of laws promulgated by King Ethelbert
109. The use of "whale-road"for sea and "life-house"for body are examples of
what literary technique, popular in Old English poetry?
a) symbolism
b) simile
c) metonymy
d) kenning
e) appositive expression
110. Which of the following statements is not an accurate description of Old
English poetry?
a) Romantic love is a guiding principle of moral conduct.
b) Its formal and dignified use of speech was distant from everyday use of
language.
c) Irony is a mode of perception, as much as it was a figure of speech.
d) Christian and pagan ideals are sometimes mixed.
e) Its idiom remained remarkably uniform for nearly three centuries.
111. Which of the following best describes litote, a favorite rhetorical device
in Old English poetry?
a) embellishment at the service of Christian doctrine
b) repetition of parallel syntactic structures
c) ironic understatement
d) stress on every third diphthong
e) a compound of two words in place of a single word
112. How did Henry II, the first of England's Plantagenet kings, acquire vast
provinces in southern France?
a) the Battle of Hastings
b) Saint Patrick's mission
c) the Fourth Lateran Council
d) the execution of William Sawtre
e) his marriage to Eleanor of Aquitaine
e) Marie de France
121. Why did the rebels of 1381 target the church, beheading the archbishop
of Canterbury?
a) Their leaders were Lollards, advocating radical religious reform.
b) The common people were still essentially pagan.
c) They believed that writing, a skill largely confined to the clergy, was a
form of black magic.
d) The church was among the greatest of oppressive landowners.
e) a and c only
122. Which influential medieval text purported to reveal the secrets of the
afterlife?
a) Dante's Divine Comedy
b) Boccaccio's Decameron
c) The Dream of the Rood
d) Chaucer's Legend of Good Women
e) Gower's Confessio Amantis
123. Who is the author of Piers Plowman?
a) Sir Thomas Malory
b) Margery Kempe
c) Geoffrey Chaucer
d) William Langland
e) Geoffrey of Monmouth
124. What event resulted from the premature death of Henry V?
a) the Battle of Agincourt
b) the Battle of Hastings
c) the Norman Conquest
d) the Black Death
e) the War of the Roses
125. Which literary form, developed in the fifteenth century, personified
vices and virtues?
a) the short story
b) the heroic epic
c) the morality play
d) the romance
e) the limerick
b.civil servant
c. a vintner
129. Chaucer became a page to which king's daughter-in-law?
a. Edward III
b. Richard II
c. Henry IV
130. which of these is not certain about Chaucer?
a. his birth date
b. his death year
c. his father's name
131. which of these kings was not served by Chaucer?
a. Edward III
b. Henry II
c. Richard II
132.what was the duration of hundred year's war?
a.1300 to 1350
b.1337 to 1453
c. 1302 to 1343
133.what did Chaucer's wife use to do?
a. lady-in-waiting to Queen Philip pa of Hainaut
b. nurse of royal court
c. governess to Henry IV
134.one of Chaucer's daughter was............?
a. a musician
b. an astronomer
c. a nun
135. in which year chaucer was imprisoned by the French?
a. 1360
b. 1357
c. 1378
136.chaucer was fined in 1367 or 1366 for..............?
a. beating a friar in a London street
b. for writing poetry against the church
c. for crossing the border of Great Britain
137. Chaucer was made in-charge of many palaces,which of these was not in
his charge?
a. Westminster Palace
b. Tower of London
c. St. George's chapel at Windsor
d. Buckingham Palace
138. Chaucer acted as a controller of custom during.............?
a. 1374 to 1385
b. 1350 to 1360
c. 1360 to 1400
139. Chaucer was released from legal action by ........................ in a deed of
May 1, 1380 from rape and abduction?
a. Miss Cecily Chaumpaigne
b. Philippa de Roet of Flanders
c. Agnes de Copton
140. Chaucer became a member of Parliament in...........?
a. 1386
b. 1300
c. 1343
141. Chaucer buried in a corner of Westminster, which came to know
as.........?
a. Chaucer's corner
b. poet's corner
c. legend's corner
142. what was chaucer's profession?
a. a poet
b. a merchant
c. a civil servant
c)Heidelberg
d)Cambridge
156)Faustus' servant shares his name with a famous German composer.
Who?
a)Bach
b)Schumann
c)Beethoven
d)Wagner
157)Faustus asks two magicians to aid him in summoning the devil. What
are their names?
a)Valdes and Cornelius
b)Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
c)Troilus and Cressida
d)Pyramus and Thisbe
158)Through his magic, Faustus is visited first by which of the devil's angels?
a)Mephastophilis
b)beelzebub
c)Aamon
159)What does Faustus promise to the devil in exchange for great
knowledge, riches and power for a period of 24 years?
a)his body
b)his house
c)his soul
d)his horse
160)Which of the following qualities would most accurately describe Faustus'
character at the beginning of the play?
a)kind
b)stupid
c)sensitive
d)arrogant
161)Which powerful figure does Faustus ridicule with his new-found powers?
a)The Pope
b)The Holy Roman Emperor
c)The King of England
d)The King of France
162)At the end of the play, Faustus is dragged down to hell, begging to
repent.
a)True
b)False
163) "Renaissance" is a:
a)French word
b)Italian word
c)Greek word
d)Spanish word
164) What is the meaning of "Renaissance":
a)Rebirth, revival and re-awaking
b)Reveal, revel and reverie
c)Raillery, renunciation and recoup
165) Renaissance first came to the:
a)France
b)Italy
c)England
d)Rome
172) The first complete version of Bible in English language was made by:
a)Wyclif
b)Thomas more
c)John Lyly
d)Robert Greene
183) The first regular English comedy, based on the model of the Latin
comedy, is attributed to ?
a)Nicholas Udall
b)Thomas Colwell
c)Lord Burghley
184)Thomas kyd (1558-95) achieved great popularity with which of his first
work?
a)The Rare Triumphs of love and fortune
b)The Spanish Tragedy
c)Jeronimo
d)Cornelia
185)Marlowe born in________
a)1562
b)1563
c)1564
d)1565
186)In "the tragic history of Doctor Faustus". Faustus was a :
a) German scholar
b)French scholar
c)Spanish scholar
d)Greek scholar
186)Who wrote "The Massacre at Paris"?
a)Shakespeare
b)Christopher Marlowe
c)Edmund Spenser
d)john Milton
187)After the death of Christopher Marlowe who completed his unfinished
poem "Hero and Leander"?
a)Shakespeare
b)Thomas Nash
c)George Chapman
d)Thomas More
a)Edmund Spenser
b)John Donne
c)Shakespeare
d)John Milton
193) Who wrote following lines:
"........ I am involved in mankind: and therefore never send to know for whom
the bell tolls; it tolls for thee."
a)John Donne
b)John Milton
c)Earnest Hemingway
d)D.H. Lawrence
194) "On his blindness", a collection of sonnets is written by:
a)Edmund Spenser
b)John Milton
c)Shakespeare
d)Sir Philip Sidney
195) "Paradise lost" was lost by:
a)Eve
b)Adam
c)Both a and b
d)Satan
Christopher Marlowe
4)12
220)How many plays did William Shakespeare write?
a)36
b)37
c)38
d)39
221)What was Shakespeare's first play?
a)King Lear
b)Henry VI
c)The Tempest
d)Romeo and Juliet
222)How many sonnets did William Shakespeare write?
a)110
b)154
c)175
d)187
223)How many photographs exist of William Shakespeare?
a)2
b)4
c)1
d)0
224)Shakespeare died on?
a)23rd April 1616
b)25th April 1616,
c)28th April 1616
d)30th April 1616
225)Shakespeare died at the age of
a)48
b)52
c)60
d)63
226)How many times suicide occurs in Shakespeare's plays?
a)7
b)9
c)11
d)13
227)The line "To be or not to be" comes from which play?
a)Macbeth
b)Twelfth Night
c)A Midsummer Night's dream
d)Hamlet
228) Was the Globe
a) A Roman Amphitheater.
b) An Elizabethan Theater.
c) An Elizabethan sports stadium.
d) A famous map of the world.
229)Is there is a monument of Shakespeare in Stratford today?
a)True
b)False
230)Which of these was not one of Shakespeare's plays?
a)Titus Andronicus
b)The Tempest
c)Cymbeline
d)Shakespeare in love
231)Which famous Shakespeare play does the quote,"My salad days, when I
was green in judgment." come from?
a)Antony and Cleopatra
b)Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
c)The Winters Tale
d)The Merry Wives of Windsor
232)Which famous Shakespeare play does the quote,"Neither a borrower nor
a lender be" come from?
a)Cymbeline
b)Hamlet
c)Titus Andronicus
d)Pericles, Prince of Tyre
233)Which famous Shakespeare play does the quote "How sharper than a
serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child!" come from?
a)King Lear
b)As You Like It
c)The Famous History of the Life of King Henry VIII
d)The Life and Death of King John
234)In what year was the First Folio published?
a)1626
b)1621
c)1623
d)1629
235)What nationality was Shakespeare?
a)Italian
b)English
c)Scottish
d)Greek
236)In which century was Shakespeare born?
a)16th
b)14th
c)15th
d)17th
237)which famous Shakespeare play does the quote "The first thing we do,
let's kill all the lawyers" come from?
a)The Merry Wives of Windsor
b)Othello, the Moor of Venice
c)Pericles, Prince of Tyre
d)King Henry the Sixth, Part II
238)Which river is associated with Shakespeare's birth place?
a)The Thames
b)The Avon
c)The Tyburn
d)The Seven
239)Which famous play does the quote,"When shall we three meet again In
thunder, lightning, or in rain?" come from?
a) The Taming of the Shrew
b) King Lear
c) The Tempest
d) Macbeth
240)How many of Shakespeare's plays are classified as histories?
a) 7
b) 10
c) 14
d) 18
Hamlet
c) London
d) Dublin
246)How are Polonius and Laertes related?
a) Father/son
b) Uncle/nephew
c) Cousin/cousin
d) Brother/brother
247)What is the name of the playlet Hamlet stages for Claudius?
a) Slings and Arrows
b) Vice of Kings
c) The Murder of Gonzago
d) The Slaying of Lucianus
248)Who says, "Good night, sweet prince,/And flights of angels sing thee to
thy rest."?
a) Fortinbras
b) Marcellus
c) Chorus
d) Horatio
249)How does Queen Gertrude die?
a) Accidentally stabbed by Laertes.
b) Drowns in the river outside the castle.
c) Suffers a fatal heart attack while watching Hamlet fight Laertes.
d) Poisoned by drinking from Hamlet's cup.
250)Who does Polonius send to spy on Laertes in Paris?
a) Francisco
b) Gorgonzola
c) Reynaldo
d) Samson
251)Who is Voltimand?
a) Ambassador to the King of Norway from the King of Denmark
b) Hamlet's cousin
c) Ambassador to the King of Denmark from the King of Norway
d) Assassin in the service of Fortinbras
252)What poison does Claudius pour into the ear of Hamlet's father, causing
his death?
a) Burdock
b) Hebenon
c) Baneberry
d) Hemlock
253)How many soliloquies does Hamlet deliver?
a)2
b)4
c)7
d)9
Macbeth
c) Great Tragedies
d) None of above
271) "Under the green wood tree" is a song in:
a) Love's labour's lost
b) As you like it
c) A mid Summer night's dream
d) Much ado about nothing
272) :Triumph, my Britain, thou hast one to show
To whom all scenes of Europe homage owe.
He was not of an age, but for all time".
Who wrote above lines for Shakespeare:
a) Jonson
b) Bacon
c) Wordsworth
d) none of above
273) Seven Ages of Man appears in " As you like it". Which character's
speech it is?
a) Amiens
b) Orlando
c) Oliver
d) Jaques
274) "To be or not to be that is the question", is famous line of which of
Shakespeare's plays?
a) Othello
b) Macbeth
c) Hamlet
d)King Lear
275) Following are the lines of:
"I'm your wife if you marry me
If not, I'll die your maid to be your fellow
You may deny me, but I'll be your servant Whether you deny or not".
a) Hamlet
b) Romeo and Juliet
c) Tempest
d) Othello
276) Which of the following are characters of "Much ado about nothing":
a) Hero, Borachio, Antonio, Claudio, Leonato
b) Hero, Orlando, Antonio, Claudio, Leanato
c) Mirrinda, Borachio, Antonio, Claudio, Leanato
d) Hero, Boradio, Antonio, Claudio, Horatio
277) Which of the following is in correct sequel ?
a)Comedy of errors, A mid summer night's dream, Much ado about nothing,
Henry 6 part three.
b)A mid summer night's dream,Romeo and Juliet, As you like it, King
Lear,Pericles.
c)All's well that ends well, The tempest, As you like it, As you like
it,A mid summer night's dream,Much ado about nothing.
d)King Lear, Macbeth, Othello, Measure for measure, Henry 8, Romeo and
Juliet.
278)Who was killed by Hamlet unintentionally?
a) Leartus
b)Polonius
c) Forinbras
d) Horatio
279) Who is second Prince of Arragon in "Much ado about nothing"?
a) Leonato
b) Balthasar
c) Don John
d) Don Pedro
280) Which character spoke following lines?
"What's Montague? It is nor hand nor foot,
Nor arm nor face, nor any other part
Belonging to a man, O be some other name!
What's in a name?
That which we call a rose
By any other word would smell as sweet,"
a) Desdemona
b) Juliet
c) Rosalind
d) Hero
281) Who is the second attending gentlewoman on Hero? Ursula
and_________.
a) Margaret
b) Emilia
c) Helena
d) Celia
282) " Some born great, some achieve greatness
And some have greatness thrust upon them".
Above lines are taken from which of following plays?
a) Macbeth
b) Othello
c) Twelfth night
d) As you like it
283) Which of the following play was written in 1601?
a) Othello
b) Hamlet
c) King Lear
d) Macbeth
(D) Johnson
327. Which of the following is the first novel of D. H. Lawrence?
(A) The White Peacock
(B) The Trespasser
(C) Sons and Lovers
(D) Women in Love
328. In the poem Tintern Abbey, dearest friend refers to?
(A) Nature
(B) Dorothy
(C) Coleridge
(D) Wye
329. Who, among the following, is not the second generation of British
Romantics?
(A) Keats
(B) Wordsworth
(C) Shelley
(D) Byron
330. Which of the following poems of Coleridge is a ballad?
(A) Work Without Hope
(B) Frost at Midnight
(C) The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
(D) Youth and Age
331. Identify the writer who was expelled from Oxford for circulating a
pamphlet
(A) P. B. Shelley
(B) Charles Lamb
(C) Hazlitt
(D) Coleridge
332. Keatss Endymion is dedicated to?
(A) Leigh Hunt
(B) Milton
(C) Shakespeare
(D) Thomas Chatterton
333. The second series of Essays of Elia by Charles Lamb was published in?
(A) 1823
(B) 1826
(C) 1834
(D) 1833
334. Which of the following poets does not belong to the Lake School?
(A) Keats
(B) Coleridge
(C) Southey
(D) Wordsworth
335.Who, among the following writers, was not educated at Christs Hospital
School,
London?
(A) Charles Lamb
(D) D. G. Rossetti
345. A verse form using stanza of eight lines, each with eleven syllables, is
known as?
(A) Spenserian Stanza
(B) Ballad
(C) Ottava Rima
(D) Rhyme Royal
346. Identify the writer who first used blank verse in English poetry?
(A) Sir Thomas Wyatt
(B) William Shakespeare
(C) Earl of Surrey
(D) Milton
347. The Aesthetic Movement which blossomed during the 1880s was not
influenced by?
(A) The Pre-Raphaelites
(B) Ruskin
(C) Pater
(D) Matthew Arnold
348. Identify the rhetorical figure used in the following line of Tennyson Faith
un-faithful kept him falsely true.
(A) Oxymoron
(B) Metaphor
(C) Simile
(D) Synecdoche
349. W. B. Yeats used the phrase the artifice of eternity in his poem?
(A) Sailing to Byzantium
(B) Byzantium
(C) The Second Coming
(D) Leda and the Swan
350. Who is Pips friend in London?
(A) Pumblechook
(B) Herbert Pocket
(C) Bentley Drummle
(D) Jaggers
351. Who is Mr. Tench in The Power and the Glory?
(A) A teacher
(B) A clerk
(C) A thief
(D) A dentist
352. Brevity is the soul of wit is a quotation from?
(A) Milton
(B) William Shakespeare
(C) T. S. Eliot
(D) Ruskin
353. Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more
cakes and ale. Who speaks the lines given above in Twelfth Night?
(A) Duke Orsino
(B) Malvolio
(C) Sir Andrew Aguecheek
(D) Sir Toby Belch
(B) Shelley
(C) Coleridge
(D) Lamb
364. Who was Fortinbras?
(A) Claudiuss son
(B) Son to the king of Norway
(C) Ophelias lover
(D) Hamlets Mend
365. How many soliloquies are spoken by Hamlet in the play Hamlet?
A) Nine
(b) Five
(c )Seven
(D) Three
366. The best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate
intensity. The above lines have been taken from?
(A) The Waste Land
(B) Tintern Abbey
(C) The Second Coming
(D) Prayer for My Daughter
367.William Morel in Sons and Lovers is drawn after?
(A) Lawrences father
(B) Lawrences brother
(C) Lawrence himself
(D) None of these
368. The most notable characteristic of Keats poetry is?
(A) Satire
(B) Sensuality
(C) Sensuousness
(D) Social reform
369. The key-note of Brownings philosophy of life is?
(A) agnosticism
(B) optimism
(C) pessimism
(D) skepticism
370. The title of Carlyles Sartor Resartus means?
(A) Religious Scripture
(B) Seaside Resort
(C) Tailor Repatched
(D) None of these
371. Epipsychidion is composed by?
(A) Coleridge
(B) Wordsworth
(C) Keats
(D) Shlley
372. The better part of valour is discretion occurs in Shakespeares?
(A) Hamlet
(B) Twelfth Night
(C) The Tempest
(D) Henry IV, Pt I
373. Epic similes are found in which work of John Milton?
390. Heaven lies about us in our infancy. This line occurs in the poem?
(A) Immortality Ode
(B) Tintern Abbey
(C) The Second Coming
(D) Leda and the Swan
391. Wordsworth calls himself a Worshipper of Nature in his
poem
(A) Immortality Ode
borrower?
(A)Gertrude
(B) Polonius
(C)Horatio
(D) Hamlet
410. Shakespeares Henry IV, Pt I contains his?
(A) senecan attitude
(B) patriotism
(C) love of nature
(D) platonic ideals
Plays by Shakespeare..
COMEDIES
All's Well That Ends Well
As You Like It
Comedy of Errors
Love's Labour's Lost
Measure for Measure
Merchant of Venice
Merry Wives of Windsor
Midsummer Night's Dream
Much Ado about Nothing
Taming of the Shrew
Tempest
Twelfth Night
Two Gentlemen of Verona
Winter's Tale
HISTORIES
Cymbeline
Henry IV, Part
Henry IV, Part
Henry V
Henry VI, Part
Henry VI, Part
Henry VI, Part
Henry VIII
King John
Pericles
Richard II
Richard III
I
II
I
II
III
TRAGEDIES
Antony and Cleopatra
Coriolanus
Hamlet
Julius Caesar
King Lear
Macbeth
Othello
Romeo and Juliet
Timon of Athens
Titus Andronicus
Troilus and Cressida
d) Brabantio
420) Othello gave Desdemona ------------- as a token of love:
a) Ring
b) Handkerchief
c) Pendant
d) Bengals
421) Desdemona was :
a) wife of Othello
b) daughter of Othello
c) both a and b
d) none of above
422) " A man can die but once" is one of quote of following plays:
a) Henry 6 part three
b) Henry 4 part two
c) Henry 6 part one
d) Henry 4 part one
423) "I have no other but a woman's reason
I think him so, because I think him so"
Which of Shakespeare's play contain above lines?
a) The two gentle men of Verona
b) Merry wives of Windsor
c) The noble Kinsman
d) Measure for measure
424)" What piece of work is a man
How noble in reason, how infinite in faculty,
In form and moving how express and admirable
In action! how like an angle
In apprehension! how like a God:
The beauty of the World, the paragon of animals_____
And yet, to me, what is this quintessence of dust?
Above lines are taken from Hamlet's which act?
a) act 1 scene two
b) act 2 scene two
c) act 3 scene two
d) act 4 scene two
425) Which of the following is Hamlet's mother?
a) Beatrice
b) Margaret
c) Gertrude
d) Rosalind
426) Following are the characters of:
Apemantus, Alcibiades, Flavius, Lucullus, Sempronius
a) Coriolanus
b) Cymbeline
c) Timon of Athens
d) Winter's tale
427) Who is the heroin of The Tempest?
a) Ophelia
b) Desdemona
c) Miranda
d) Helena
428) Hamlet consist of --------------- acts:
a) 3
b) 4
c) 5
d) 6
429) Which of Shakespeare's play is his only play that has never been
adopted for film or Television?
a) Taming of the Shrew
b) The two Noble Kinsmen
c) Troilus and Cressida
d) Cymbeline
430) Which of Shakespeare's play features Sir John Falstaff?
a) The merry wives of Windsor
b) Troilus and Cressida
c) King John
d) Titus Andronicus
Historical Events & Literary Events
1700
1702
1727
1775
1776
1789
1726
1749
1766
1719
1728
1712
1740
English Rulers
1702-1714 Anne
1714-27 George
I1727-1760 George II
Authors
1667-1745 Jonathan Swift
1668-1744 Alexander Pope
1689-1761 Samuel Richardson
1707-1754 Henry Fielding
1728-1774 Oliver Goldsmith
1672-1719 Joseph Addison
1716-1771 Thomas Gray
1721-59 Collins
1700-48 Thomson
1731-1800 Cowper
1709-84 Dr. Johnson
Major Historical and Literary Events
1668. Dryden Made poet Laureate
English Rulers
1660-1685 Charles II
1685-1688 James II
1688-1702 William & Mary
Major Authors
1631-1700 John Dryden
1628-88 John Bunyan
1664-1721 Matthew Prior
1633-1703 Samuel Pepys
1664-1726 Sir John Vanbragh
Age of Milton
Major Historical and Literary events
1642
1642
1649
1653
1658
1660
1660
1660
1629
1631
1633
1637
1642
1644 Milton's "Areopagitica." English poet and writer John Milton publishes
Areopagita, an essay espousing freedom of the press. Milton writes the
piece in response to the censorship that is rampant in England at the time.
1659 Drydens The Death of Cromwell
1660 Samuel Pepys begins his diary.
1667 Milton's "Paradise Lost." English poet John Milton completes his epic
poem Paradise Lost in 1674 after becoming blind. The work, which tells the
story of Lucifers rebellion in heaven and Adams fall, is an extended
meditation on humanitys relationship with God, human nature, and the
meaning of life. It is considered one of the masterpieces of world literature.
1678. Bunyan's"Pilgrim's Progress." English Puritan John Bunyan writes the
religious allegory Pilgrim's Progress in 1678. The work, generally considered
a masterpiece in Christian and English literature, describes the journey of the
central character, named Christian, through life to eventual salvation.
Rulers of English Throne
1625-49 Charles I
1649-60 Commonwealth the Protectorate
Authors of This Era
1579-1625
1593-1633
1605-1682
1608-1674
1621-1666
1633-1703
John Fletcher
Herbert
Sir Thomas Browne
John Milton
Henry Vaughan
Samuel Pepys
Elizabethan Period
431) What was the nickname of Mary I?
a)Bloody Mary
b)Mary, Mary Quite Contrary
c)Mary, Queen of Scots
d)None of the Above
Christopher Marlowe, and Edmund Spenser were some of the more famous
playwrights and poets of the time. Drama, music, songs, and art were
popular with noblemen and commoners alike. Exploring certain topics,
however, was considered taboo in any art form. What was a strictly forbidden
subject?
a)Sexuality
b)Criticism of the queen
c)Murder
d)Witchcraft
d)Petrarchan
Jacobean Era
472)In literature, some of Shakespeare's most powerful plays were written in
that period (for example The Tempest, King Lear, and Macbeth), as well as
powerful works by John Webster and ________.
a)William Shakespeare
b)Ben Jonson
c)Ben Jonson folios
d)English Renaissance theatre
473)What proceeded Jacobean era?
a)Elizabethan Era
b)Caroline era
c)Victorian era
d)Jacobean Era
474)The Jacobean era ended with a severe economic depression in 1620
1626, complicated by a serious outbreak of ________ in London in 1625.
a)Cholera
b)Tuberculosis
c)Bubonic plague
d)Plague (disease)
475)The word "Jacobean" is derived from the ________ name Jacob, which is
the original form of the English name James.
a)Samaritan Hebrew language
b)Biblical Hebrew
c)Mishnaic Hebrew
d)Hebrew language
476)The Jacobean era succeeds the ________ and precedes the Caroline era,
and specifically denotes a style of architecture, visual arts, decorative arts,
and literature that is predominant of that period.
a)Elizabethan era
b)English Reformation
c)England
d)Tudor period
477)Jonson was also an important innovator in the specialized literary subgenre of the ________, which went through an intense development in the
Jacobean era.
a)William Shakespeare
b)Ben Jonson
c)Masque
d)A Midsummer Night's Dream
478)the first fire-breathing dragon in English literature occurs in which Old
English epic poem.
a)Iliad
b)Odyssey
c)Beowulf
d)Canterbury Tales
479)What are the beginning and ending dates of the reign of James I ?
a)1592-1608
b)1603-1625
c)1607-1627
d)1608-1639
480)Famous satiric drama,Volpone,is written by?
a)Sir Walter Scot
b)Christopher Marlow
c)Ben Johnson
d)George Herbert
481)The foremost poet of Jacobean era was?
a)John Milton
b)Charles Bacon
c)John Donne
d)Herbert Spencer
482)"The Jacobean Era" refers to a period of time in the early 17th century
in which of the following countries?
a) Jordan
b) England
c)Malaysia
d)Tunisia
>>>The foremost poets of the Jacobean era, Ben Jonson and John Donne,
are regarded as the originators of two diverse poetic traditionsthe
Cavalier and the metaphysical.
a)John Skelton
b)William Shakespeare
c)Sir Thomas Wyatt
d)Thomas Carew
496)Historical events often influence literature. Which of the following did
NOT occur during the Restoration period?
a)Charles II was restored to the throne
b)The French Revolution
c)The Great Fire of London
d)The Exclusion Bill Crisis
497)He was not a Renaissance writer.
a)William Shakespeare
b)Sir Philip Sidney
c)Christopher Marlowe
d)Sir Thomas Malory
498)Which of the following literary sub-periods does NOT fall under the
Neoclassical Period?
a)The Restoration
b)Jacobean Age
c)The Augustan Age
d)The Age of Sensibility
499)Which of the following periods of English literature came last?
a)The Elizabethan Age
b)The Commonwealth Period
c)The Jacobean Age
d)The Middle English Period
500)This work was written before the other three choices.
a)Bede's "An Ecclesiastical History of the English People"
b)Julian of Norwhich's "Book of Showings"
c)Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales"
d)Sir Thomas More's "Utopia"
501)Which of the following writers would be an appropriate subject for a
class on The Literature of the British Empire?
a)Rudyard Kipling
b)Edward Fitzgerald
c)Charlotte Bronte
d)Any of these
502)World War I affected the writing of many authors. Which of the following
poets would not have been touched by that event?
a)T.S. Eliot
b)Siegfried Sassoon
c)Wilfred Owen
d)Oscar Wilde
503)The period of maturation, intellectual growth and social graces during
the Renaissance is called the:
A) aristocracy
B) New Age
C) Reformation
D) Enlightenment
504)The most popular French playwright, Jean Baptiste Poquelin, is known
as:
A) Caleron
B) Corneille
C) Couperin
D) Moliere
505)The first Englishwoman to earn her living as a playwright was:
A) Nell Gwynn
B) Aphra Behn
C) Lady Teazle
D) Ann Hathaway
The Life Of John Milton(Caroline Period-The Renaissance)
(1608-1674)
506.In which city was Milton?
a)Norwich
b)York
c)London
d)Canterbury
507. When was John Milton born?
a) 22 April 1600
b) 19 August 1604
c) 6 June 1606
d) 9 December 1608
508. Which school did Milton attend?
a)St Paul's
b)Christ's Hospital
c)Merchant Taylors'
d)Westminster
509. Milton continued his studies at Cambridge. Which college of the
university did he attend?
a) Pembroke College
b) Trinity College
c) Christs College
d) St. Xaviers College
510. Edward King, a minor poet and a contemporary of Milton's at
Cambridge, was drowned at sea in 1637. Milton wrote an elegy for him. What
was the title of this poem?
a)lycidas
b)Paradise Lost
c)Il penseroso
511. In 1638 and 1639 Milton traveled abroad. In which country did he
spend most of the time?
a)Germany
b)France
c)Italy
d)Spain
512. How many times did Milton marry?
a)2
b)0
c)1
d)3
513. John Milton was 34 when he married Mary Powell. How old was she?
a) 48
b) 34
c) 22
d) 17
about the future of the human race, beginning with Cain murdering Abel and
ending with the redemption of mankind through Christ. Who is this angel that
has a large role in the finishing chapters of 'Paradise Lost'?
a)Michael
b)Abdiel
c)Rafael
d)Gabriel
528. Milton's "unholy trinity" of characters includes:
a)Error, Temptation, and Satan
b)Sin, Death and Temptation
c)Sin, Temptation, and Satan
d)Satan, Sin, and Death
529. The battle between God's army and Satan's rebels in heaven lasted:
a)One day
b)Three days
c)Seven days
d)One hour
530. In the phrase, "thy seed shall bruise our foe," the "seed" refers to:
a)The Tree of Knowledge
b)Adam
c)Cane and Abel
d)Jesus Christ
531. In the phrase, "thy seed shall bruise our foe," "thy" refers to:
a)Sin
b)Eden
c)Satan
d)Eve
532. The two archangels who serve as generals in God's army are:
a)Michael and Gabriel
b)Michael and Raphael
c)Raphael and Gabriel
d)Michael and Lucifer
533. For inspiration in writing the poem, Milton says he depends on:
a)Wine
b)The Holy Spirit
c)His favorite pen
d)The Son
534. Earth is described as being connected to heaven by a:
a)"stepping stones of clouds
b)Golden rope
c)Golden chain
d)Ladder
535. Sin was born out of Satan's:
a)Head
b)Lust
c)Anger
d)Rib
535. Eve before the Fall might best be described as:
a)a feminist
b)uncomfortable with Adam
c)detailed oriented
d)a docile, vain creature
536. Throughout the poem, Satan transforms himself into many creatures.
Which creature does Satan not turn into?
a)a mouse
b)a cherub
c)a toad
d)a serpent
537. Who might be considered the friendliest and most sociable of all God's
angels?
a)Adam
b)Michael
c)Raphael
d)Lucifer
538. Everyday before the Fall Adam and Eve went out to work. What did
their work consist of?
a)Hunting and gathering food
b)Tending to the Garden of Eden
c)Building shelter to live in
d)Naming all God's creatures and plants
539. The reason for Satan's fall might best be described as:
a)incest
b)lust
c)greed
d)pride
540. The reason for Eve's fall might best be described as:
a)vanity
b)lust
c)greed
d)pride
541. On the second day of battle in heaven, what does Satan use that
surprises God's forces?
a)Catapults
b)Artillery
c)Illusions
d)The Holy Sepulcher
542. Adam, Satan, and Eve herself are all dazzled by Eve's:
a)Wit
b)Beauty
c)Intelligence
d)Hard work and spirituality
543. The main reason for Adam's fall might best be described as:
a)lust
b)love for Eve
c)pride
d)money
544. When God sees that Adam and Eve have disobeyed him, who does he
send to "judge" them and the snake?
a)The Son
b)The Holy Ghost
c)Michael
d)Raphael
545. Inspired by Satan's victory over man, Sin and Death construct:
a)a bridge from hell to heaven
b)a temple to welcome Satan back
c)a bridge from hell to earth
d)a funnel from Eden to the gates of hell
546. After they have both eaten from the Tree of Knowledge, the first thing
Adam and Eve do is:
a)Ask forgiveness from God
b)Put some clothes on
c)Satisfy their sexual desire for each other
d)Blame each other for their Fall
547. The Archangel Michael might best be described as:
a)Jealous and envious
b)Bombastic
c)Firm and militant
d)Kind and caring
548. When Michael tells Adam what will become of mankind after the Fall, he
is actually narrating stories taken directly from:
a)The New Testament
b)Homer's epic poems
c)The Hebrew Bible
d)The Koran
549. What are the best words to describe the Garden of Eden, the weather,
and nature in general, before the Fall of Adam and Eve?
a)Ordered and rational
b)Chaotic
c)Wild and unmanageable
d)Comfortable
Prof. A.R. Somroo
03339971417
550. Which angel does Satan trick by disguising himself as a cherub?
(A) Michael
(B) Uriel
(C) Raphael
(D) Abdiel
551. In what book does the fall take place?
(A) Book VIII
(B) Book X
(C) Book IX
(D) Book VII
552. In which book of the Bible does the story of Adam and Eve occur?
(A) Leviticus
(B) Exodus
(C) Genesis
(D) Deuteronomy
553. Which devil advocates a renewal of all-out war against God?
(A) Belial
(B) Moloch
(C) Mammon
(D) Beelzebub
554. What is Miltons stated purpose in Paradise Lost?
(A) To assert his superiority to other poets
(B) To argue against the doctrine of predestination
(C) To justify the ways of God to men
(D) To make his story hard to understand
555. Which of the following is not a character in Paradise Lost?
(A) Night
(B) Agony
(C) Discord
(D) Death
556. Which angel wields a large sword in the battle and wounds Satan?
(A) Michael
(B) Abdiel
(C) Uriel
(D) Satan is not injured
557. When Satan leaps over the fence into Paradise, what does Milton liken
him to?
(A) A snake slithering up a tree
(B) A germ infecting a body
(C) A wolf leaping into a sheeps pen
(D) A fish leaping out of water
558. Which angel tells Adam about the future in Books XI and XII?
(A) Raphael
(B) Uriel
(C) Michael
(D) None of the above
559. Which of the following is not found in Hell?
(A) Gems
(B) Gold
(C) Oil
(D) Minerals
560. Which statement about the Earth is asserted as true in Paradise Lost?
(A) It was created before God the Son
(B) Earth hangs from Heaven by a chain
(C) The Earth is a lotus flower
(D) The Earth revolves around the sun
561. Which devil is the main architect of Pandemonium?
(A) Mulciber
(B) Mammon
(C) Moloch
(D) Belial
562. How many times does Milton invoke a muse?
(A) One
(B) Two
(C) Three
(D) Four
d)Jonah
582.What is the name of the sequel to Paradise Lost?
a)Paradise Found
b)Paradise Lost Twice
c)Paradise Regained
d)Paradise Lost Again
583.who was the companion of Adam in paradise?
a)satan
b)eve
c)rapheal
d)god
584.Who is "till wand'ring o'er the earth"?
a)Satan's associates
b)Satan
c)Adam
d)Eve
585. Who will fall through his own "fault"?
a)Satan
b)God
c)Adam
d)Noah
586.Who "headlong themselves they threw Down from the verge of
Heav'n"?
a)Adam and Eve
b)Noah and the elephant
c)Rebel angels
d)Benjamin and Joseph
587. Who pondered, "How such united force of gods, how such As stood like
these, could ever know repulse?"?
a)Adam
b)Moses
c)Joseph
d)Satan
588.Who is described? "For dignity composed and high exploit: But all was
false and hollow"
a)Lot
b)Belial
c)Satan
d)Moses
589. When was Paradise Lost published?
a) 1660
b) 1667
c) 1658
d) 1654
590.When was Paradise Regained published?
a) 1671
b) 1656
c) 1669
d) 1652
Prof. A.R.Somroo
03339971417
The Renaissance
b) Cervantes
c) Martin Luther
d) Alexander VI
600.The "father of humanism" was
a)Petrarch
b)Dante
c)Boccaccio
d)Pico della Mirandola
601.Renaissance thinkers argued that women should be educated
a)just the same as men
b)with emphasis on science and mathematics
c)not at all
d)confined solely to music, dancing, and knitting
602.An important feature of the Renaissance was an emphasis on
a)alchemy and magic
b)the literature of Greece and Rome
c)chivalry of the Middle Ages
d)the teaching of St. Thomas Acquinas
603.Which was NOT a characteristic of the Renaissance?
a)emphasis on individuality
b)confidence in human rationality
c)the emergence of merchant oligarchies
d)the development of social insurance programs
604.The northern Renaissance differed from the Italian Renaissance
a)growth of religious activity among common people
b)earlier occurrence
c)greater appreciation of pagan writers
d)decline in the use of Latin
605.For ordinary women, the Renaissance
a)had very little impact
b)greatly improved the material conditions of their lives
c)worsened their social status
d)allowed them access to education for the first time
606.Thomas More's Utopia placed the blame for society's problems on
a)human nature
b)God's will
c)society itself
d)the Church
Random MCQs
607. In which century was Piers Plowman written?
a)14th
b)12th
c)10th
d)11th
608. Geoffrey Chaucer served which king?
a)Richard III
b)James 1
c)Edward III
d)Henry II
609. The 18th century work 'Tom Jones" was written by whom?
a)Samuel Johnson
b)Henry Fielding
c)John Donne
d)Tobias Smollett
610. In 1905, Virginia Woolf began to write for which publication?
a)The Time's Literary Supplement
b)The Lady's Home Journal
c)Strand Magazine
d)Reader Magazine
611. Joyce's novel 'Ulysses' takes place over what period of time?
a)A week
b)24 hours
c)A lifetime
d)6 months
612. What was the nationality of Oscar Wilde?
a)Irish
b)Scottish
c)French
d)English
613. Who wrote the poem "Requiem"?
a)Robert Louis Stevenson
b)William Shakespeare
c)Samuel Johnson
d)John Milton
614. the prevailing feature of Chaucer's humour is its
a)urbanity
b)crudity
c)triviality
d)sanctity
615. who is the first great English critic-poet?
a)Shakespeare
b)Arnold
c)Sir Philip Sidney
d)Chaucer
616. HYMN TO ADVERSITY is a poem by
a)Thomas gray
b)Alexander Pope
c)Edward gibbon
d)William Blake
617. Who wrote the poem 'The Seven Ages'?
a)John Milton
b)Geoffrey Chaucer
c)William Shakespeare
d)Edward Gibbon
618. who write the story "Story Teller" ?
a)William Wordsworth
b)William Shakespeare
c)Thomas Grey
d)Saki
Restoration and The 18TH Century
619. What happened in 1707 that would forever alter the relationship
between England, Wales, and Scotland?
a)the trial and execution of Mary, Queen of Scots
b)the Toleration Act
c)the failed invasion of the Spanish Armada
d)the Bishops' War
e)the Act of Union
620. Which of the following was a major factor in the unprecedented
economic wealth of Great Britain during the eighteenth century?
a)formal diplomatic relations with China
b)the exploitation of colonial resources, labor, and the slave trade
c)the American and French revolutions
d)the creation of the bourgeois novel as a commodity
e)the union of England and Wales with Scotland
621. What was "restored" in 1660?
a)the monarchy, in the person of Charles II
b)the dominance of the Tory Party
c)the "Book of Common Prayer"
d)toleration of religious dissidents
e)Irish independence.
622. What literary work best captures a sense of the political turmoil,
particularly regarding the issue of religion, just after the Restoration?
a)Gay's Beggar's Opera
b)Butler's Hudibras
c)Fielding's Jonathan Wild
d)Pope's Dunciad
e)Dryden's Absalom and Achitophel
623. Who was deposed from the English throne in the Glorious, or Bloodless,
Revolution in 1688?
a)Elizabeth I
b)James II
c)George II
d)William and Mary
e)Anne
624. Who became the first "prime minister" of Great Britain in the reign of
George II?
a)Henry St. John
b)Robert Harley
c)John Churchill
d)Robert Walpole
e)Matthew Prior
625. In the late seventeenth century, a "battle of the books" erupted
between which two groups?
a)abolitionists and enthusiasts for slavery
b)round-earthers and flat-earthers
c)the Welsh and the Scots
d)champions of ancient and modern learning
e)Oxfordians and Baconians
626. Which of the following best describes the doctrine of empiricism?
a)theoretical science
b)metaphysics
c)abstract logical deductions
d)a and b only
e)a, b, and c
628. Whose great Dictionary, published in 1755, included more than 114,000
quotations?
a)William Hogarth
b)Jonathan Swift
c)Samuel Johnson
d)Ben Jonson
e)James Boswell
629. According to Samuel Johnson, "No man but a blockhead ever wrote
except for...:
a)love."
b)honor."
c)money."
d)his party."
e)fun."
630. What name is given to the English literary period that emulated the
Rome of Virgil, Horace, and Ovid?
a)Augustan
b)Metaphysical
c)Romantic
d)Neo-Romantic
e)Caesarian
631. Horace's doctrine "ut pictura poesis" was interpreted to mean:
a)A picture is worth a thousand words.
b)Poetry is the supreme artistic form.
c)Art should hold a mirror up to nature.
d)Poetry ought to be a visual as well as a verbal art.
e)Paintings of poets should be prized over those of kings.
632. What was most frequently considered a source of pleasure and an
object of inquiry by Augustan poets?
a)civilization
b)woman
c)God
d)alcohol
e)nature
633. What word did writers in this period use to express quickness of mind,
640. What London locale, where many poor writers lived, became
synonymous with hacks and scandal mongers?
a)Elephant and Castle
b)Grub Street
c)Covent Garden
d)Cheapside
e)Piccadilly Circus
641. With its forbidden themes of incest, murder, necrophilia, atheism, and
torments of sexual desire, Horace Walpole's Castle of Otranto, created which
literary genre?
a)the revenge tragedy
b)the Gothic romance
c)the epistolary novel
d)the comedy of manners
e)the mystery play
642. Which of the following is not indebted to the Gothic genre?
a)William Beckford's Vathek
b)Matthew Lewis's The Monk
c)Tobias Smollett's Roderick Randsom
d)Ann Radcliffe's The Italian
e)William Godwin's Caleb Williams
643. While compiling what sort of book did Samuel Richardson conceive of
the idea for his Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded?
a)a history of everyday life
b)an instructional manual for manners
c)a book of devotion
d)a book of model letters
e)a chapbook
644. Who was the ancient Gaelic warrior-bard considered by Napoleon and
Thomas Jefferson to have been greater than Homer?
a)Macpherson
b)Merlin
c)Decameron
d)Taliesin
e)Ossian
645. John Donne is, in some sense, the originator of metaphysical poetry.
But who is most closely associated with the founding of neoclassical
poetry?
a)William Wordsworth
b)Alexander Pope
c)Ben Jonson
d)George Herbert
646. Which of the following is not generally considered to be a neoclassical
poet?
a)John Dryden
b)Henry Vaughan
c)Alexander Pope
d)Ben Jonson
647. Which of the following is not a common feature of neoclassical poetry?
a)Imitation of classical forms and allusion to mythology
652. Alexander Pope coined many a modern day clich. Which of the following did not
originate with him?
c)Thomas Moore
d)Edgar Allan Poe
665.In which work do you read: "Things fall apart; the center cannot hold."?
a)The Canturbury Tales
b)The Dark Angel
c)The Wild Swans of Coole
d)The Second Coming
666.Who wrote: "Beauty is truth, truth beauty."?
a)John Keats
b)William Shakespeare
c)Samuel Butler
d)Samuel Taylor Coleridge
667.In which work do you read: "Beauty is truth, truth beauty."?
a)Adonais
b)Bright Star
c)Ode on a Grecian Urn
d)La Bell Dame Sans Merci
668.Who wrote: "In Xanadu did Kubla Khan / A stately pleasure dome
decree..."?
a)Samuel Taylor Coleridge
b)Robert Browning
c)John Keats
d)Walt Whitman
669.In which work do you read: "In Xanadu did Kubla Khan / A stately
pleasure dome decree..."?
a)Kubla Khan
b)Hellas
c)The Phoenix and the Turtle
d)The Castaway
670.A side note: Which drug/substance was Samuel Taylor Coleridge
addicted to?
a)Heroine
b)Cocaine
c)Alcohol
d)Opium
678.Who wrote: "I have measured out my life with coffee spoons."?
a)William Carlos Williams
b)T.S. Eliot
c)Ernest Hemingway
d)Hart Crane
679.In which work do you read: "I have measured out my life with coffee
spoons."?
a)Lovesong of J.Alfred Prufrock
b)Sonnets from the Portuguese
c)Prelude
d)The Last Decalogue
680.A "classic" book is usually one that possesses what quality?
a)It has universal appeal.
b)It can stand the test of time.
c)It makes connections.
d)All of the above.
681. A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens involves which two cities?
a)London and Rome
b)Paris and Rome
c)London and Paris
d)Berlin and London
682.The Catcher in the Rye takes place in what city?
c)Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
d)Boston, Massachusetts
683.Which book was not written by Jane Austen?
a)Sense and Suspensibility
b)Emma
c)Pride and Prejudice
d)Mansfield Park
684.What is Shakespeare's longest play?
a)Taming of the Shrew
b)Romeo and Juliet
c)A Midsummer Night's Dream
d)Hamlet
685)The poem 'The Battle of Maldon' celebrates events which took place in
the 10th century, but who was it between
a)Danes and English
b)Dutch and English
c)Normans and English
d)French and English
686)The Faerie Queene was written during the reign of which monarch?
a)James I
b)Mary Tudor
c)Elizabeth Tudor
d)Henry VII
687)Becky sharp was the heroine in which novel?
a)Vanity Fair
b)Sense and Sensibility
c)Pride and Prejudice
d)Mansfield Park
688) How many children were there in the Bronte family?
a)3
b)4
c)5
d)6
689)Who composed The Preludes?
a)S T Coleridge
b)William Wordsworth
c)William Shakespeare
d)William Blake
690)Who is termed as "The Morning Star of Renaissance"?
a)Spenser
b)John Gower
c)Chaucer
d)Langland
691)Who began the tradition of revenge play ?
a)Goorge peele
b)Samuel daniel
c)Phineas fletcher
d)Thomas kyd
692)How many lines are there in a Sonnet?
a)10
b)16
c)14
d)22
693)What are the names of the two feuding families in Romeo and Juliet?
a)Capulet And Montague
b)Breslow and Felsher
c)Fuech and Goodside
d)Dawson and Hurley
694)Which bird did the Ancient Mariner kill?
a)Seagull
b)Albatross
c)Humming Bird
d)Crow
695)What was the name of the Bronte sisters only brother?
a)Anderson
b)Branwell
c)Richard
d)Pearson
696)In which county was Jane Austin born?
a)Sussex
b)Hampshire
c)Yorkshire
d)Norfolk
701. Which social philosophy, dominant during the Industrial Revolution, dictated that only
the free operation of economic laws would ensure the general welfare and that the
government should not interfere in any person's pursuit of their personal interests?
a) economic independence
b) the Rights of Man
c) laissez-faire
d) enclosure
e) lazy government
702. What served as the inspiration for P. B. Shelley's poems to the working
classes A Song: "Men of England" and England in 1819?
a) the organization of a working class men's choral group in Southern
England
b) the Battle of Waterloo
c) the Peterloo Massacre
d) the storming of the Bastille
e) the first Reform Bill, passed in 1832, which aimed to bring greater
Parliamentary representation to the working classes
703. Who applied the term "Romantic" to the literary period dating from
1785 to 1830?
a) Wordsworth because he wanted to distinguish his poetry and the poetry of
his friends from that of the ancien rgime, especially satire
b) English historians half a century after the period ended
c) "The Satanic School" of Byron, Percy Shelley, and their followers
d) Oliver Goldsmith in The Deserted Village (1770)
e) Harold Bloom
704. Which poets collaborated on the Lyrical Ballads of 1798, thus
demonstrating the "spirit of the age," which, in an era of revolutionary
thinking, depended on a belief in the limitless possibilities of the poetic
imagination?
a) Mary Wollstonecraft and William Blake
b) Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley and Percy B. Shelley
c) William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge
d) Charles Lamb and William Hazlitt
e) Dorothy Wordsworth and Sally Ashburner
705. Which of the following became the most popular Romantic poetic form, following on
Wordsworth's claim that poetic inspiration is contained within the inner feelings of the
individual poet as "the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings"?
inhabited by spirits
b) a spontaneous belief in the supernatural based upon a surprise encounter with a
supernatural being
a) William Blake
b) Alfred Lord Tennyson
c) Samuel Johnson
d) William Wordsworth
e) Mary Wollstonecraft
710. What is the term we now use for what the Romantics called
"mesmerism," one of the "occult" practices that allowed people to explore
altered states of consciousness?
a) smoking opium
b) hypnotism
c) psychoanalysis
d) dream interpretation
e) Satanism
711. Romantic poets would have enjoyed, agreed with, and perhaps written about which of
the following figures as depicted?
a) Goethe's Faust in Faust, who is sinful because he attempts to exceed the bounds of
human knowledge by making a pact with the devil but is nonetheless redeemed in his
striving to break free of the bounds of mortality
b) Icarus, who is killed in attempting to fly because only Gods have the power to fly and
mortals must be taught the limitations of human existence
c) Prometheus, who succeeds in stealing fire from the Gods and thereby surpasses the
limitations placed on humans by the Gods
712. Which of the following best describes the sort of language and tone
most often used when Romantic writers discuss the French Revolution?
a) snide indifference
b) biblical reverence
c) condemning censure
d) satirical derision
e) none of the above: Romantic writers had no interest in the French
Revolution.
713. Which of the following descriptions would not have applied to any
Romantic text?
a) a spiritual autobiography written in an epic style
717. Which of the following periodical publications (reviews and magazines) appeared in
the Romantic era?
a) London Magazine
b) The Spectator
c) The Edinburgh Review
d) The Tatler
e) a and c only
718. According to a theater licensing act, repealed in 1843, what was meant
by "legitimate" drama?
a) The dramaturge and playwright had to be related.
a) Fanny Burney
b) Mary Wollstonecraft
c) Anna Letitia Barbauld
d) Jane Austen
e) Mary Shelley
c) all women
d) b and c
e) a, b and c
734. Which of the following charges were commonly leveled at the novel by
its detractors at the dawn of the Romantic era?
Prof. A.R.Somroo
03339971417
Victorian Age
739. Which ruler's reign marks the approximate beginning and end of the
Victorian era?
a) King Henry VIII
b) Queen Elizabeth I
c) Queen Victoria
d) King John
e) all of the above, in that order, with Victoria's reign marking the most
pivotal period for England's colonial efforts in India, Africa, and the West
Indies
740. Which city became the perceived center of Western civilization by the
middle of the nineteenth century?
a) Paris
b) Tokyo
c) London
d) Amsterdam
e) New York
741. By 1890, what percentage of the earth's population was subject to
Queen Victoria?
a) 1%
b) 10%
c) 15%
d) 25%
e) 95%
742. What did Thomas Carlyle mean by "Close thy Byron; open thy Goethe"?
a) Britain's preeminence as a global power will depend on mastery of foreign
languages.
b) Even a foreign author is better than a homegrown scoundrel.
c) Abandon the introspection of the Romantics and turn to the
higher moral purpose found in Goethe.
d) In a carefully veiled critique of the monarchy, Byron and Goethe stand in
symbolically for Queen Victoria and Charles Darwin respectively.
e) Leave England and emigrate to Germany.
743. To whom did the Reform Bill of 1832 extend the vote on parliamentary
representation?
a) the working classes
b) women
c) the lower middle classes
d) slaves
e) conservative landowners
744. Elizabeth Barrett's poem The Cry of the Children is concerned with
which major issue attendant on the Time of Troubles during the 1830s and
1840s?
a) women's rights and suffrage
b) child labor
c) Chartism
d) the prudishness and old-fashioned ideals of her fellow Victorians
e) insurrection in the colonies
745. Who were the "Two Nations" referred to in the subtitle of Disraeli's Sybil
(1845)?
a) the rich and the poor
b) Anglicans and Methodists
c) England and Ireland
d) Britain and Germany
Prof. A.R.Somroo
03339971417
760. What was the relationship between Victorian poets and the Romantics?
a) The Romantics remained largely forgotten until their rediscovery by T. S.
Eliot in the 1920s.
b) The Victorians were disgusted by the immorality and narcissism of the
Romantics.
c) The Romantics were seen as gifted but crude artists belonging to a distant,
semi-barbarous age.
d) The Victorians were strongly influenced by the Romantics and
experienced a sense of belatedness.
e) The Victorians were aware of no distinction between themselves and the
Romantics; the distinction was only created by critics in the twentieth
century.
761. Experimentation in which of the following areas of poetic expression
characterize Victorian poetry and allow Victorian poets to represent
psychology in a different way?
a) the use of pictorial description to construct visual images to represent the
emotion or situation of the poem
b) sound as a means to express meaning
c) perspective, as in the dramatic monologue
20th Century
766. Which of the following phrases best characterizes the late-nineteenth
century aesthetic movement which widened the breach between artists and
the reading public, sowing the seeds of modernism?
a) art for intellect's sake
b) art for God's sake
c) art for the masses
d) art for art's sake
e) art for sale
767. What was the impact on literature of the Education Act of 1870, which
made elementary schooling compulsory?
777. Which of the following writers did not come from Ireland?
a) W. B. Yeats
b) James Joyce
c) Seamus Heaney
d) Oscar Wilde
e) none of the above; all came from Ireland
778. Which phrase indicates the interior flow of thought employed in highmodern literature?
a) automatic writing
b) confused daze
c) total recall
d) stream of consciousness
e) free association
779. Which of the following is not associated with high modernism in the
novel?
a) stream of consciousness
b) free indirect style
Prof. A.R.Somroo
03339971417
GPGC, KOT ADDU
Muzaffargarh