A. Arthur Hallam
B. Milton
C. Edward King
D. Hugh Clough
Victorian Age
Victorian Age
A. King Henry VIII
B. Queen Elizabeth I
C. Queen Victoria
D. King John
A. a renewed secularism in the twentieth century
B. modern literary criticism
C. late “nineteenth-century and early” twentieth-century satirical drama
D. the surrealist movement
A. the novel
B. nonfiction prose
C. the lyric
D. comic drama
A. William Morris
B. John Ruskin
C. Edward FitzGerald
D. all but c
A. Anthony Trollope
B. Charles Dickens
C. John Ruskin
D. Friedrich Engels
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 use of pictorial description to construct visual images to represent the emotion or situation of the poem
B. sound as a means to express meaning
C. perspective, as in the dramatic monologue
D. all of the above
A. geology
B. evolution
C. discoveries in astronomy about stellar distances
D. all of the above
A. A group of unattractive people relegated to the colonies to perform missionary work where they wouldn’t tarnish the aesthetics of the Church of England.
B. Also called Nonconformists or Dissenters, Evangelicals led the missionary movement in the colonies, advocated a Puritan moral code, and were responsible for the emancipation of slaves in the British Empire as early as 1833.
C. They were part of the High Church or the \Catholic\side of the church.
D. They were devout \tractarians,\as described by John Henry Newman.