A. Lord Byron
B. Bob Southey
C. Don Juan
D. A nameless narrator
Related Mcqs:
- “Don Juan” and “Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage” are broken into sections called______________?
A. Cantos
B. Stanzas
C. Lines
D. Chapters - The dedication of Byron’s “Don Juan” can be best described as ________________?
A. Sincere and heartfelt
B. Mocking and satirical
C. Mournful and dark
D. Polemic and dry - The general tone and attitude of Byron’s “Don Juan” would be best described as ______________?
A. Dramatic and dark
B. Ironic and satirical
C. Strange and haunting
D. Humorless and stark - Which Romantic poet would be most likely to feature a main character or narrator in a poem who is heroic, tortured, cynical, highly emotional, and intelligent ?
A. John Keats
B. William Blake
C. Lord Byron
D. Samuel Taylor Coleridge - The Primary Narrator for Books Eleven and Twelve of “Paradise Lost,” who relates future events is which of the following ?
A. The Son
B. Raphael
C. Michael
D. Adam - I took my visitors all over the house. I bade them search — search well. I led them, at length, to his chamber. I showed them his treasures, secure, undisturbed. The narrator is________________?
A. Helping Robin to search for his uncle
B. A detective
C. Leading the police to the scene of a crime
D. Helping the police to look for a letter - What does the narrator find at the end of the journey ?
A. Field and works
B. Crusted snow and dead leaves
C. Hills and highways
D. all are sleeping - The narrator returns home during the_______________?
A. spring
B. Winter
C. fall
D. summer - Who is the narrator in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby (1925) ?
A. Gatsby
B. Nick
C. Buchannan
D. None of the above - Why was it important that slave narratives have a title page that claimed either that the narrative was written by the narrator himself (or his words were recorded by someone close to him, preferably white) ?
A. So the author could get paid.
B. In order for people to believe the events in the narratives.
C. So that slave owners could refute the events in the narratives.
D. So that the author could be assured he wouldn’t be recaptured.