A) A historical drama B) Morality play C) A romantic tragedy
A) a) Good-Deeds B) b) Knowledge C) c) Death D) d) Fellowship
A) ) Unwilling and unprepared for his reckoning B) a) Excited to go to heaven C) d) Eager to leave his possessions behind
A) d) Knowledge B) c) Wealth C) a) Companions D) b) Time
A) d) Knowledge B) ) Fellowship C) b) Goods D) c) Good-Deeds
A) c) Knowledge B) d) Family C) b) Wealth D) . a) Friends
A) b) Himself B) a) Family C) c) God d) D) Fellowship
A) Fellowship c) B) b) Knowledge C) Beauty D) d) Confession
A) Easter B) c) Christmas d C) a) New Year’s Day D) ) Midsummer
A) Go on a quest together B) Engage in a sword fight b C) Test their strength d) D) ) Trade blows c)
A) King author B) ) Guinevere C) d) Merlin
A) b) Sword B) d) Head C) a) Armor D) c) Shield
A) God B) ) The Green Knight C) c) King Arthur D) d) The lady
A) Fox B) Hawk C) Deer D) Boar
A) Lord B) Jester C) Knight D) Cook
A) Sword B) Bracelet C) Ring D) Sash
A) Gawain B) The lord C) Merlin D) King Arthur
A) Queen Guinevere c) ) B) Lady Bertilak d C) A sorceress D) Morgan le Fay
A) b) Shadows B) c) Illusions C) ) Treasures D) d) Memories
A) Death B) God C) Everyman D) Knowledge
A) Cousin B) Confession C) c) Good Deeds d) D) ) Kindred
A) a) His wealth B) ) An accounting of his life C) b) His family c D) ) A pilgrimage d
A) a) Fellowship b) B) sc) Knowledge C) d) Cousin
A) Romance B) a) Epic Poem b) C) Ballad c D) ) Allegory d)
A) fearsome dragon B) The Green Knight C) A fearsome dragon D) Morgan le Fay
A) ) b) Sir Kay B) Sir Lancelot C) d) Sir Galahad D) Sir Gawain
A) riddle contest B) A beheading game d) A C) ) A jousting tournament b) A D) quest for a magical artifact c)
A) a) A magic potion b) B) A poisoned apple c) C) Three kisses and a green girdle d)
A) friendly giant d) B) A wealthy lord C) ) A hermit b) c D) The Green Knight himself
A) A royal court gathering stories D B) A. A pilgrimage to Rome B. C) A group of travelers going on a pilgrimage to Canterbury C. D) . Knights preparing for a crusade
A) D. John Milton B) Thomas Malory C. C) A. William Shakespeare B. D) Geoffrey Chaucer
A) The Pilgrims' Inn D. B) The Bell Tavern B. C) The Tabard Inn C. D) The Lion’s Den
A) To compete for royal approval B) A. To entertain the group during the journey B. C) To earn money C. D) To gain political favor D.
A) . The Clerk B) The Miller D C) The Wife of Bath C. D) A. The Knight B.
A) D. Feminism and marriage B) Justice and revenge C) Chivalry and honor D) . Wealth and poverty B.
A) Palamon and Arcite C. B) A. Arthur and Gawain B. C) Tristan and Lancelot D. D) Roland and Charlemagne
A) B. Revenge is dangerous C. B) Wealth can bring happiness C) . Patience is a virtue D) Greed leads to destruction D
A) The Miller B) The Pardoner B. C) D. The Parson D) The Knight C.
A) . Tragedy B) . Fabliau C) . Romance D) Epic
A) . Military advancements B. B) Expansion of feudalism C) C. Religious reforms D. D) Revival of classical knowledge and art
A) France B) Italy C) . England D) Germany
A) A. Leonardo da Vinci B B) Michelangelo C) Petrarch D. D) . Dante Alighieri C.
A) Raphael C. B) . Michelangelo C) . Donatello D) Leonardo da Vinci
A) The compass B) . The printing press . C) C. The telescope D D) The microscope
A) Niccolò Machiavelli B) D. Baldassare Castiglione C) A. Francesco Petrarch D) B. Dante Alighieri
A) Chemistry, geology, and biology D B) Law, theology, and education C) Astronomy, anatomy, and art D) Zoology, botany, and agriculture
A) Christopher Marlowe B) Geoffrey Chaucer C) . John Milton D) William Shakespeare C
A) B. Awakening C. B) Enlightenment C) Discovery D) Rebirth
A) Thomas Hobbes B) René Descartes C) . Voltaire D) John Locke B.
A) Jean-Jacques Rousseau C. B) D. David Hume C) Immanuel Kant D) . John Locke
A) Natural selection B) Social contract C. C) . Separation of powers B. D) Economic laissez-faire
A) The Renaissance D. B) The Protestant Reformation C) The French Revolution D) A. The Crusades
A) The Social Contract B) Leviathan C) The Wealth of Nations D) Candide
A) Jean-Jacques Rousseau B) . John Locke B. C) D. Immanuel Kant D) Thomas Hobbes C.
A) C. Economics B) D. Psychology C) A. Sociology D) B. Political Science
A) Myth and folklore B) . Rational thought and scientific observation C) A. Revelation and divine inspiration B. D) Tradition and superstition C D.
A) C. Voltaire B) B. Thomas Paine C) ? A. John Locke D) D. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
A) A. The English Civil War B. B) The signing of the Magna Carta C) The return of Charles II to the throne D D) The Glorious Revolution C. .
A) B. Charles II B) A. James I C) C. Charles D) II D. William III
A) D. Historical epics B) C. Comedy of manners C) A. Romantic tragedy D) B. Morality plays
A) C. William Wycherley B) A. William Congreve C) B. John Dryden D) D. Richard Steele
A) C. Prose fiction B) B. Heroic couplets C) D. Sonnets D) A. Blank verse
A) D. Mystical and allegorical B) B. Satirical and skeptical C) C. Inspirational and hopeful D) A. Serious and devout
A) C. She Stoops to Conquer B) B. The Rivals C) "? A. The Way of the World D) D. The School for Scandal
A) B. Being a religious allegory B) A. Criticizing the monarchy C) C. Introducing heroic couplets D) D. Mocking upper-class society
A) Scientific research and exploration D. B) . Religious studies C. C) A. Literature and poetry B
A) D. Focus on individual emotion and B) B. Wit, satire, and social commentary C) A. Religious zeal and mysticism D) C. Pastoral themes and nature worship subjectivity
A) D. Political theory and governance B) . Religious devotion and spirituality C) A. Rational thought and scientific progress D) B. Individual emotion, nature, and imagination C
A) C. Germany B) Italy C) A. France D) B. England
A) A. John Keats B. B) D. Percy Bysshe Shelley C C) . William Blake D) William Wordsworth
A) C. Interest in supernatural elements B) B. Emphasis on individualism C) A. Celebration of nature D) D. Strict adherence to reason and logic
A) D. Ann Radcliffe B) C. Charlotte Brontë C) Jane Austen B. D) Mary Shelley
A) C. John Keats B) . Samuel Taylor Coleridge C) "? A. Lord Byron D) B. William Wordsworth
A) D. The tragedy of war B) B. The joys of rural life C) C. The simplicity of pastoral life D) A. The power and mystery of creation
A) ? A. Percy Bysshe Shelley B) . Samuel Taylor Coleridge C) B C. William Blake D) D
A) C. Poetry B) B. Essays C) D. Drama D) A. Novels
A) B. The Prelude B) D. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner C) A. Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage D) C. Prometheus Unbound
A) C. Developing the form of the epic poem B) A. Writing plays about the monarchy B. C) His contributions to Romantic poetry D) D. Being a prominent novelist of his time
A) B. To Autumn B) C. Ozymandias C) ? A. Ode to a Nightingale D) D. Ode on a Grecian Urn
A) The pleasures of rural life B) A. The inevitability of death C) D. The power of nature D) B. The nature of art and beauty C.
A) C. Sublime Reflection B) A. Negative Capability C) D. Aesthetic Detachment D) . Romantic Melancholy
A) B. "A thing of beauty is a joy forever" B) D. "My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains" C) C. "Thou wast not born for death, immortal Bird!" D) A. "Beauty is truth, truth beauty"
A) A harvester B) ? A. A child C) D. A philosopher D) C. A wanderer
A) C. Political revolution B) A. Heroic conquests C) B. Transience of life and beauty D) D. Religious devotion
A) . "Beauty is truth, truth beauty B) C. "Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness" D C) B. "A thing of beauty is a joy forever" D) . "My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains
A) B. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner B) ? A. Ode to a Nightingale C) C. The Lady of Shalott D) D. Don Juan
A) His experience of illness and loss made him reflect B) . B. on mortality and beauty. C) C. His role in politics led him to write poems on political issues. D) D. He was inspired by his travels around the world. |