- A.narrative " point of view"
- B.rhetorical devices
- C.way of using metaphors
- D.way of using symbols
- A.skepticism
- B.belief
- C.appreciation
- D.passion
- A.human existence
- B.politics
- C.religion
- D.arts
- A.academic
- B.official
- C.colonial
- D.legislative
- A.Innocents Abroad .
- B.The Gilded Age
- C.Life on the Mississippi
- D.Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
- A.love and hatred
- B.sin and evil
- C.frustration and self - denial
- D.balance and self - discipline
- A.literary essays
- B.travel accounts
- C.poems
- D.plays
- A.The Sun Also Rises
- B.Light in August
- C.The Fable
- D.The Mansion
- A.poet
- B.critic
- C.essayist
- D.stylist
- A.North Boston
- B.The Gift Outright"
- C.New Hampshire
- D.A Boy's Will .
- A.Death in the Woods
- B.Tender Is the Night
- C.The Sound and the Fury
- D.An American Tragedy
- A.war experiences
- B.love experiences
- C.marriage
- D.education
- A.traditional
- B.unconventional
- C.ordinary
- D.unbelievable
- A.outer world
- B.inner world
- C.physical world
- D.domestic world
- A.Innocents Abroad
- B.The Lost Paradise
- C.Leaves of Grass
- D.The Waste Land
- A.Herman Melville
- B.Mark Twain
- C.Ernest Hemingway
- D.Virginia Woolf
- A.music
- B.circumstances
- C.memory
- D.love
- A.Sons and Lowers
- B.The Rainbow
- C.Kangaroo
- D.Lady Chatterley' s Lover
- A.a military army
- B.a vulnerable group
- C.a human society
- D.a lonely individual
- A.proposing marriage
- B.pursuing the truth
- C.losing idealism
- D.making a choice
- 31
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Dickens' best depicted characters are those innoent , virtuous, persecuted and helpless_________.
- A.child characters
- B.females
- C.laborors
- D.farmers
- A.Thomas Hardy
- B.D. H. Lawrence .
- C.Charles Dickens
- D.George Bernard Shaw
- A.Hamlet
- B.Macbeth
- C.Romio and Juliet
- D.Othello
- A.Henry Fielding
- B.Jonathan Swift
- C.Daniel Defoe
- D.William Blake
- A.Paradise Regained
- B.Paradise Lost
- C.Samson Agonistes
- D.Areopagitica
- A.change
- B.creativity
- C.ethic
- D.tradition
- A.Sons and Lovers
- B.The Rainbow
- C.Women in Love
- D.Lady Chatterley' s Lover
- A.The Mayor of Casterbridge
- B.Tess of the D' Urbervilles
- C.Jude the Obscure
- D.Under the Greenwood Tree
- A.tradition
- B.inversion
- C.bordering
- D.distortion
- A.Jane Eyre
- B.Shirley
- C.Villette
- D.The Professor
- A.The Bible
- B.Creek Mythology
- C.A German Legend
- D.Arabian Nights
- A.There are fewer jokes and the comedy becomes harsher.
- B.There is always a happy ending.
- C.The novels are of great compactness and concentration.
- D.Most of the works present a criticism of the more complicated and yet most fundamental social institutions and morals of Victorian England.
- A.Pride and Prejudice
- B.Sense and Sensibility
- C.Emma
- D.Persuasion
- A.Daniel Defoe
- B.Johnathan Swift
- C.Henry Fielding
- D.Charles Dickens
- A.William Blake
- B.William Wordsworth
- C.T. S. Eliot
- D.William Shakespeare
- A.Songs of Experience
- B.Songs of Innocence
- C.Marriage of Heaven and Hell
- D.Poetical Sketches
- A.Brobdingnag
- B.Lilliput
- C.Flying Island
- D.Houyhnhnm
- A.The Shortest Way with the Dissenters
- B.The True - born Englishman
- C.Robinson Crusoe
- D.A Journal of the Plague Year
- A.The Merchant of Venice
- B.Much Ado About Nothing
- C.Twelfth Night
- D.A Midsummer Night' s Dream
- A.Paradise Regained
- B.Paradise Lost
- C.Samson Agonistes
- D.Areopagitica