A. his love of poetry
B. his love of ancient cultures
C. his love of Greek culture and art
D. None of these
Related Mcqs:
- Which period of John Keats as called “the most placid time in Keats’s life” by Cowden Clarke, a close friend of Keats ?
A. His visit to Lake District
B. Keats’ lodging in the attic above the
surgery at 7 Church Street
C. Keats stay in Italy
D. Keats’ travel to Alps - Keats’ widespread appeal is to the Reader’s interest in the supernatural ?
A. True
B. False
C. both A and B
D. none of these - The literary figure who had the most pronounced effect on Keats was_______________?
A. Dante
B. Shakespeare
C. Wordsworth
D. Shelley - The line ‘Beauty is truth, truth beauty’ occurs in which one of Keats’ following poems_______________?
A. Ode to Nightingale
B. Ode to Grecian Urn
C. Ode to Psyche
D. None of these - Negative Capability to Keats, means_______________?
A. The ability to sympathize with other
B. Say bad thing, about others
C. To empathize
D. None of these - When was John Keats born?
A. 25 December 1767
B. 30 April 1789
C. 31 October 1795
D. 22 November 1756 - What was the profession of Thomas Hammond under whom John Keats joined for apprenticeship ?
A. teacher
B. surgeon
C. banker
D. lawyer - In which school did John Keats study ?
A. John Clarke’s school
B. King’s Grammar School
C. Harrow
D. Eton - The most notable characteristic of Keats’ poetry is ?
A. Satire
B. Sensuality
C. Sensuousness
D. Social reform - Complete the following sentence. Keats’s “Ode to a Nightingale” is characteristically Romantic because of_____________?
A. its focus on his lost love.
B. its rejection of scientific progress.
C. its elaboration of the intersecting importance of nature and the imagination.
D. its development of elements from national folklore.