A. Anne Boleyn
B. Mary I
C. Mary, Queen of Scots
D. Catherine of Aragon
Ages, era, period
Ages, era, period
A. a series of Factory Acts
B. the Custody Act
C. the Women’s Suffrage Act
D. the Married Women’s Property Rights Acts
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, semibarbarous age.
D. The Victorians were strongly influenced by the Romantics and experienced a sense of belatedness.
A. a renewed secularism in the twentieth century
B. modern literary criticism
C. late nineteenth-century and earlytwentieth- century satirical drama
D. the surrealist movement
A. Tennyson
B. Elizabeth Barret Browning
C. D. G. Rossetti
D. Christina Rossetti
A. The people of the Oxford area
B. The Scholars of the Oxford University
C. The clergymen of Oxford
D. The University Wits
A. They were all poets
B. They were all associated with Pre- Raphaelite School
C. They were all atheists
D. They were all associated with the Oxford Movement
A. Britain’s manifest destiny to colonize the world
B. the moral responsibility to bring civilization and Christianity to the peoples of the world
C. the British need to improve technology and transportation in other parts of the world
D. the importance of solving economic and social problems in England before tackling the world’s problems
A. Arabian Nights
B. Canterbury Tales
C. Shah Namah
D. Pilgrims Progress
A. The Wife of Bath, The Clerk, Sir Gawain and The Franklin are characters and tale-tellers in this work.
B. “The General Prologue’ is appended to The Canterbury Tales.
C. In all, Chaucer tells thirty tales in this work.
D. The Canterbury Tales remained unfinished at the time of its author’s death.