- A.purity
- B.generosity
- C.evil
- D.love
- A.Herman Melville
- B.Nathaniel Hawthorne
- C.Washington Irving
- D.Walt Whitman
- A.Mark Twain
- B.Henry James
- C.Theodore Dreiser
- D.Walt Whitman
- A.Theodore Dreiser
- B.Henry James
- C.Washington Irving
- D.Walt Whitman
- A.the South
- B.the West
- C.England
- D.New England
- A.Moby-Dick
- B.Redburn
- C.Mardi
- D.Typee
- A.love and nature
- B.death and universe
- C.death and immortality
- D.family and happiness
- A.evil
- B.nature
- C.society
- D.purity
- A.F. Scott Fitzgerald
- B.William Faulkner
- C.Ernest Hemmingway
- D.Gertrude Steinbeck
- A.pre - War of Independence
- B.post - War of Independence
- C.pre - Civil War
- D.post - Civil War
- A.Walt Whitman
- B.William Faulkner
- C.Ernest Hemingway
- D.F. Scott Fitzgerald
- A.Robert Frost
- B.Theodore Dreiser
- C.William Faulkner
- D.F. Scott Fitzgerald
- A.Leaves of Grass
- B.“Cavalry Crossing a Ford”
- C.“Song of Myself”
- D.Drum Taps
- A.Herman Melville
- B.Nathaniel Hawthorne
- C.Robert Lee Frost
- D.T.S. Eliot
- A.T. S. Eliot
- B.Ernest Hemingway
- C.William Faulkner
- D.Mark Twain
- A.William Faulkner
- B.Theodore Dreiser
- C.Ernest Hemingway
- D.F·Scott Fitzgerald
- A.Walt Whitman
- B.Ezra Pound
- C.Washington Irving
- D.Nathaniel Hawthorne
- A.the Jazz Age
- B.the Age of Reason and Revolution
- C.the Babybooming Age
- D.the Post- Modern Age
- A.William Blake
- B.William Wordsworth
- C.John Keats
- D.Percy Bysshe Shelley
- A.John Milton
- B.William Blake
- C.Henry Fielding
- D.William Wordsworth
- A.William Blake
- B.William Wordsworth
- C.Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- D.George Gordon Byron
- A.“To a Skylark”
- B.“I Wondered Lonely as a Cloud”
- C.“An Evening Walk”
- D.“My Heart Leaps Up”
- A.The Tempest
- B.The Winter’s Tale
- C.Cymbeline
- D.The Rape of Lucrece
- 34
-
John Milton’s ______ is the only generally acknowledged epic in English literature since Beowulf.
- A.Paradise Lost
- B.Paradise Regained
- C.Samson Agonistes
- D.Areopagitica
- A.The Professor
- B.Jane Eyre
- C.Wuthering Heights
- D.Far from the Madding Crowd
- A.“To a Skylark”
- B.“The Cloud”
- C.“Ode to Liberty”
- D.Adonais
- A.the first- person narration
- B.the epistolary form
- C.the picaresque form
- D.the third -person narration
- A.Tess of the D’Urbervilles
- B.The Mayor of Caste Bridge
- C.The Return of the Native
- D.Jude the Obscure
- 39
-
The major theme of Jane Austen’s novels is ______ toward which she holds on a practical idealism.
- A.love and money
- B.marriage and money
- C.love and family
- D.love and marriage
- A.Daniel Defoe’s
- B.Charles Dickens’
- C.Jonathan Swift’s
- D.Henry Fielding’s
- A.romanticism
- B.realism
- C.naturalism
- D.modernism
- A.The Professor
- B.Shirley
- C.Villette
- D.Jane Eyre
- A.Daniel Defoe
- B.Jonathan Swift
- C.Henry Fielding
- D.Oliver Goldsmith
- A.innocent, virtuous, persecuted and helpless child characters
- B.horrible and grotesque characters
- C.broadly humorous or comical characters
- D.simple, innocent and faithful women characters
- A.Man and Superman
- B.The Apple Cart
- C.Pygmalion
- D.Too True to Be Good
- A.A Tale of a Tub
- B.The Battle of the Books
- C.Gulliver’s Travels
- D.A Modest Proposal
- A.The Rainbow
- B.Women in Love
- C.Sons and Lovers
- D.Lady Chatterley’s Lover
- A.Captain Singleton
- B.Moll Flanders
- C.Roxana
- D.Robinson Crusoe
- A.The Pickwick Paper
- B.Oliver Twist
- C.David Copperfield
- D.Nicholas Nickleby
- A.“Prufrock”
- B.“Gerontion”
- C.The Hollow Men
- D.Four Quartets