A. Dryden
B. Pope
C. Dr. Johnson
D. Addison
Related Mcqs:
- Who said that Shakespeare in his comedies has only heroines and no heroes ?
A. Ben Jonson
B. John Ruskin
C. Thomas Carlyle
D. William Hazlitt - In his lectures on Shakespeare’s tragedies, A.C. Bradley states that he will not do which of the following ?
A. Compare Shakespeare to other writers.
B. Evaluate and examine Hamlet.
C. Consider anything about Shakespeare’s comedies.
D. Discuss any aspect of Shakespeare’s philosophy. - Who wrote “Shakespeare’s Later Comedies’ ?
A. A.C. Bradley
B. Palmer D.J.
C. Dr.Johnsofl
D. None of these - Which of the following are tragedies of Shakespeare ?
A. Hamlet, Othello and Troilus and Cressida
B. Coriolanus, Timon of Athens and Titus Andronicus
C. King Lear, Measure for measure and The merchant of Venice
D. Macbeth, Much ado about nothing and Antony and Cleopatra - In Shakespeare’s Tragedies Character is not Destiny but there is Character and Destiny is a remark by________________?
A. Nicoll
B. Goddord
C. Bradley
D. Coleridge - In his reading of Shakespeare’s “Fair Youth Sonnets,” who does Charlton Ogburn suppose Shakespeare to have really been ?
A. Marlowe
B. Swift
C. Oxford
D. Bacon - Which of the following statements about Greek tragedies is true ?
A. They were not popular with ancient Greek audiences.
B. They were usually set in the past.
C. They were almost never set in the past.
D. They were often done in honor of the Greek god Zeus. - According to skeptics of Shakespeare’s authorship, all of the following are considered to be the “true” authors of some of Shakespeare’s plays EXCEPT________________?
A. Thomas More.
B. Francis Bacon.
C. Earl of Oxford.
D. John Shakespeare. - Shakespeare sometimes used the trochee, which in meter refers to which of the following? In Shakespeare’s plays, a troche is___________________?
A. The same as an iamb with an unstressed and stressed syllable in a foot
B. The opposite of an iamb with a stressed and then unstressed syllable in a foot
C. Only one syllable for the length of a foot
D. None of the above - His son Rip, an urchin begotten in his own likeness, promised to inherit the habits, with thåe old clothes of his father. He was generally seen trooping like a colt at his mother’s heels, equipped in a pair of his father’s cast-off galligaskins, which he had much ado to hold up with one hand, as a fine lady does her train in bad weather. What are “galligaskins” ?
A. Long, wide petticoats
B. A trench-coat
C. Loose, wide breeches
D. Underpants