A. partition
B. segregation
C. enclosure
D. division
Related Mcqs:
- What is the name for the process of dividing land into privately owned agricultural holdings ?
A. partition
B. segregation
C. enclosure
D. division - Who owned the rights to a theatrical script ?
A. the patron of the acting company, eg, the Lord Chamberlain
B. the bishop of London
C. the printer
D. the acting company - What was the first name of the playing company King’s Men that William Shakespeare partly-owned ?
A. Lord Chamberlain’s Men
B. Stratford Theatre
C. The Queens Troupe
D. The London Theatre - The epigraph of The Waste Land is borrowed from ?
A. Virgil
B. Fetronius
C. Seneca
D. Homer - Which of the following myths does not figure in The Waste Land ?
A. Oedipus
B. Grail Legend of Fisher King
C. Philomela
D. Sysyphus - Who called ‘The Waste Land ‘a music of ideas’ ?
A. Allen Tate
B. J.C Ransom
C. I.A Richards
D. F. R Leavis - _____________the eyes of all people are upon us; soe that if wee shall deale falsely with our god in this worke wee have undertaken and soe cause him to withdrawe his preent help from us, wee shall be made a story and a by-word through the world, wee shall open the mouthes of enemies to speake evill of the ways of god and all professours for Gods sake; wee shall shame the faces of many of gods worthy servants, and cause theire prayers to be turned into Cursses upon us till we be consumed out of the good land whether wee are going ?
A. Fredrick Douglass
B. John Winthrop
C. Benjamin Franklin
D. William Apess - Who wrote “The waste land” ?
A. Langston Hues
B. William Faulkner
C. Wallace Stevens
D. T.S. Elliot - T.S. Eliot’s “TheWaste Land” begins with which of the following well-known opening lines ?
A. “Was it for this-”
B. “Riverrun, past Eve and Adam’s, from swerve of shore to bend of bay, brings us by a commodius vicus of recirculation back to Howth Castle and Environs.”
C. “And the worst friend and enemy is but Death.”
D. “April is the cruellest month” - According to Professor Hammer, which of the following is the central question explored by T.S. Eliot in “The Waste Land” ?
A. Is authentic poetry possible in the aftermath of the carnage of World War I?
B. Given the diversity of the world’s poetic traditions, can there be a universal language of poetic symbolism?
C. How can a shared world be created out of the fundamentally different and private experiences of individual people?
D. Given that each person experiences trauma differently, is it possible for all to understand the modern world as a shared “waste land”?