A. Chaucer’s corner
B. poet’s corner
C. legend’s corner
D. none of the above
Ages, era, period
Ages, era, period
A. beating a friar in a London street
B. for writing poetry against the church
C. for crossing the border of Great Britain
D. none of the above
A. a musician
B. an astronomer
C. a nun
D. none of the above
A. leather merchant
B. civil servant
C. a vintner
D. none of the above
A. Edward III
B. Henry II
C. Richard II
D. none of the above
A. Westminster Palace
B. Tower of London
C. St. George’s chapel at Windsor
D. Buckingham Palace
A. embellishment at the service of Christian doctrine
B. repetition of parallel syntactic structures
C. ironic understatement
D. stress on every third diphthong
A. the reign of King Arthur
B. the coronation of Henry II
C. King John’s seal of the Magna Carta
D. the marriage of Henry II to Eleanor of Aquitaine
A. 1374 to 1385
B. 1350 to 1360
C. 1360 to 1400
D. none of the above
A. banishment to Asia
B. everlasting shame
C. conversion to Christianity
D. mild melancholia