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