A. How nature can render someone good
B. How nature can corrupt someone
C. Eternal youth
D. A dark voyage into madness
Related Mcqs:
- Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein most reflects which central romantic themes or concerns ?
A. Nature as mirroring the human mind and its imagination
B. The limits of scientific attempts to understand and control the world
C. The poet as special interpreter of the world
D. The centrality of subjective experience to apprehending the world - Which of the following is NOT a central theme of Wordsworth’s poetry ?
A. The common man
B. The promises of technology
C. The outcast figure
D. The movement of time - In Saturn, what does Peter Damian say about God’s ways ?
A. He says that God’s ways are similar to those of Roman emperors.
B. He says that God’s ways are extremely simple.
C. He says that God’s ways are beyond human understanding.
D. He says that God’s ways are only available to those in heaven. - Who wrote following lines: “_________ I am involved in mankind: and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.” ?
A. John Donne
B. John Milton
C. Earnest Hemingway
D. Lawrence - Who is the author of ‘For Whom the Bell Tolls’ ?
A. Charles Dickens
B. Homer
C. Lord Tennison
D. Ernest Hemingway - In her essay “Wordsworth Balladry: Real Men Wanted,” Elizabeth Fey argues that the Romantics were interested in the medieval focus upon _______________?
A. Courtly love and modern-seeming emotion
B. Violence
C. Nature
D. Death and disease - Duncan Wu rejects the assertion that Wordsworth’s Lucy poems were primarily about ______________?
A. Death
B. Perception
C. Exhaustion
D. Love - Which poem by Wordsworth examines writer’s block ?
A. “The Prelude”
B. “We Are Seven”
C. “Lines Written a few miles above Tintern Abbey”
D. “Lines Written in Early Spring” - Which poem is considered Wordsworth’s magnum opus ?
A. “Lyrical Ballads”
B. “The Prelude”
C. “We Are Seven”
D. “Lines Written in Early Spring” - Which of the following would probably NOT occur in a William Wordsworth poem ?
A. Use of common, everyday language
B. Engagement with the natural world
C. Mockery of political figures
D. Psychological insight