Question 1 
The dream in lines 11-20 is a      miniature allegory that has several analogies to the world in which the      boys live.  The “Angel who had a bright key /And … open’d the coffins      and set them all free” (line 13-14) represents __________.

those who exploit   the boys but would one day set them free

an anti-child labor   activist or legislator or benefactor or law

society

the church
1.6 points   
Question 2 
The dream in lines 11-20 is a      miniature allegory that has several analogies to the world in which the      boys live.  The “green plain” (line 15) represents __________.

hope for a better   and happier future

an anti-child labor   activist or legislator or benefactor or law

death

the church
1.6 points   
Question 3 
In line 3, the boy is calling out      his trade; instead of “sweep,” he cries “weep weep weep weep.” This is the      poet’s way of telling the reader that __________.

the boy is being   taught by experience

the boy knows his   plight and is satirizing those who take advantage of him.

the boy is too   young to articulate clearly, let alone sweep chimneys

the boy is weeping   out loud in the streets
1.6 points   
Question 4 
The dream in lines 11-20 is a      miniature allegory that has several analogies to the world in which the      boys live.  The “coffins of black” (line 12) represent __________.

the chimneys in   which the boys work

the boys’ hostels

the streets

life
1.6 points   
Question 5 
In line 3, the boy is calling out      his trade; instead of “sweep,” he cries “weep weep weep weep.” This is the      poet’s way of telling the reader that __________.

the boy should work   so his poverty and weeping would be rewarded

the boy knows his   plight and satirizes those who take advantage of him

the boy is pitiable   and that the reader should weep over his plight

the boy is weeping   out loud in the streets
1.6 points   
Question 6 
“To strive, to seek, to find,      and not to yield” is from what poem?

“Barter”

“Ozymandias”

“Ulysses”

“The   Tiger”
1.6 points   
Question 7 
M. H. Riken proposes six tools or      substructures of the art form, poem. These include paraphrase, rational,      image, metric, sound, and syntax. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 8 
Lines 11-12 of Gerard Manley      Hopkins’ “God’s Grandeur” reads: “And though the last lights off the black      West went / Oh, morning, at the brown brink eastward, springs—” The images      of sunset and sunrise symbolize God’s __________.

imminent   destruction of the world

the coming of the   Lord

perpetual renewal   of nature

creation of life   and death
1.6 points   
Question 9 
T. S. Eliot appropriated the story      of his poem, “The Journey of the Magi,” from _______?

Plato

Aristotle

Sophocles

Matthew
1.6 points   
Question 10 
The images in _____ create an      impression of child labor.

“Autumn”

“The Chimney   Sweeper”

“Design”

“Stopping by   Woods on a Snowy Evening”
1.6 points   
Question 11 
Another name for Petrarchan sonnet      is

English sonnet

Italian sonnet

Shakespearean   sonnet

Miltonian sonnet
1.6 points   
Question 12 
Lyrical poetry differs from other      writing in the fairly small emotional response that it generates. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 13 
The term used for a rhyme in which      the repeated accented vowel sound is in the final syllable of the words      involved (example dance-pants).

Masculine rhyme

Feminine rhyme

Internal rhyme

End rhyme
1.6 points   
Question 14 
When we understand all the      conditions and circumstances involved in a paradox, we find that what at      first seemed impossible is actually entirely plausible and not impossible      at all. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 15 
What happens versus what the      reader knows to be true is

dramatic irony

verbal irony

situational irony

motivational irony
1.6 points   
Question 16 
Tropes create meaning that cannot      be expressed any other way. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 17 
In this poem, the poet or persona      asks that God “o’erthrow” him, reclaim him as His own, and      “marry” him.

“God’s   Grandeur”

“Easter   Wings”

“Batter My   Heart, Three-Personed God”

“The   Lamb”
1.6 points   
Question 18 
The most significant literary      device in the poem, “It Sifts from Leaden Sieves” is metaphor. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 19 
The speaker of “The Chimney      Sweeper” is a dead boy. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 20 
Line 3 of George Herbert’s      “Virtue” reads: “The dew shall weep thy fall tonight.” The word “fall”      means __________.

end

decrease

dawn

original sin
1.6 points   
Question 21 
A poem can be organized without      stanza breaks, refrain, or rhythm. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 22 
An imagistic poem gives the verbal      representation of a sense experience, as of sight, touch, taste, smell,      and hearing. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 23 
The term used for a rhyme in which      the repeated accented vowel sound is in either the second or third last      syllable of the words involved (example hurrying-scurrying).

Masculine rhyme

Feminine rhyme

Internal rhyme

End rhyme
1.6 points   
Question 24 
A metaphor is the imaginative      identification of two similar objects. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 25 
The poem “Ode To A      Nightingale” was written by

William Wordsworth

John Keats

Robert Frost

Emily Dickinson
1.6 points   
Question 26 
“Journey of the Magi”      maintains that Christ’s birth was a “hard and bitter agony.” 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 27 
The three major types of irony are      verbal irony, dramatic irony, and irony of situation. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 28 
Edwin Arlington Robinson authored      the poem “God’s Grandeur.” 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 29 
In _____ rhyme sounds, the      repeated sound is in the final syllable of the words involved (e.g.,      “sight” and “light”).

internal

feminine

approximate

end
1.6 points   
Question 30 
Irony of situation results from      the incongruity between the actual and the anticipated circumstance in      “Ozymandias.” 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 31 
According to the lecture notes,      the allusion in the poem “Out, Out – -” is from

Tennessee Williams’   The Glass Menagerie

The book of Revelation

Shakespeare’s play MacBeth

Yeats’   “Sailing to Byzantium”
1.6 points   
Question 32 
In Shakespeare’s “That Time      of Year” time is shown to pass via the stages of a plant’s life in      spring season. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 33 
In “Ozymandias” the      reader gains his information from a direct observer of a great irony. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 34 
In the poem, “It Sifts from      Leaden Sieves,” Dickinson compares snowfall to God’s righteousness      covering the earth. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 35 
Keats died of polio. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 36 
Irony is the situation or use of      language involving some kind of incongruity or discrepancy. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 37 
The term used for rhymes that      occur at the ends of lines is

Masculine rhyme

End rhyme

Feminine rhyme

Internal rhyme
1.6 points   
Question 38 
Theme is the unifying      generalization of a literary work. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 39 
Onomatopoeia is the use of words      that supposedly mimic their meaning in their sound. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 40 
The term used for a rhyme in which      one or both of the rhyme-words occurs within the line is

Masculine rhyme

Feminine rhyme

Internal rhyme

In media res rhyme
1.6 points   
Question 41 
The poem, “Virtue,” was      written by George Herbert. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 42 
Hazlitt defined poetry as      “The universal language which the heart holds with nature and      itself.” 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 43 
“Ode to a Nightingale”      speaks of two scenes. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 44 
“Chimney Sweeper” uses a      dichotomy between the horror that the children experience and what is      said. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 45 
Images evoke the senses. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 46 
“Journey off the Magi”      alludes to Horace. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 47 
Lines 7-8 of Gerard Manley      Hopkins’ “God’s Grandeur” reads: And wears man’s smudge and shares man’s      smell: the soil / Is bare now, nor can foot feel, being shod.”  “The      soil / Is bare” because __________.

humans have sullied   it with their commercial and industrial activities

the setting is   winter

God has sent   drought as punishment for the sins of humans

humans have   improved the landscape
1.6 points   
Question 48 
Tropes demand intellectual      involvement on the part of the reader. 
True 
False 
1.6 points   
Question 49 
Which of the following poem was      written by John Donne

“Batter My   Heart, Three-Personed God”

“Dover   Beach”

“Redemption”

“Fern   Hill”
1.6 points   
Question 50 
To paraphrase content is to be      able to summarize a work, to offer its core idea(s). 
True 
False 

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