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LLS SEM 1 An 3 ISTORIA LITERATURII ENGLEZE 1.

."The red rose as symbol stands for charity or Christian love, while the white stands for virginity." 2.Oliver Goldsmith s poetry displays sentimental excess and anger towards the society of his time. 3.Byron wrote the Faustian dramatic poem Manfred before he came to know Shelley. 4. In Windsor-Forest Alexander Pope imitates Virgil s Aeneid. 5. John Milton wrote Il Penseroso in blank verse. 6 . A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning by John Donne introduces the famous conceit of the tears that may overflow / This world and drown th departing lover. 7. "For Shelley, poetry is a lamp which sheds light on truth." 8. "In To His Coy Mistress, Andrew Marvell tackles the classical theme sic transit gloria mundi." 9. "Both in Aeschylus and in Shelley, Jupiter chains Prometheus to a rock in the Olympus." 10. The Greek word for personification is prospopoeia.

11. Identifying the key words in a poem helps us in detecting its theme. 12. Sonnet 66 by Shakespeare alludes to the horrible censorship of the Elizabethan age. 13. Christopher Marlowe wrote Hero and Leander in blank verse. 14. The biblical allusions in Andrew Marvell s To His Coy Mistress is Noah s Flood. 15. William Collins odes dealt with changes in nature and human passions. 16 .Shelley was a great defender of the institution of marriage. 17. John Donne is the first important English satirist. 18. Robert Frost was a great defender of metrical poetry. 19. The aposiopesis is a figure that shows the sudden interruption of speech. 20. The Owl and the Nightingale is written in rhyming couplets. 21. Coleridge is considered the first Romantic who transformed the reader into a traveller journeying in an unknown space.

22. Geoffrey Chaucer s Prioress is the embodiment of pity for the poor. 23. The main character in John Keats The Eve of St. Agnes is Saint Agnes. 24. John Donne s ancestors included the famous humanist Thomas Moore and the famous dramatist John Heywood. 25. Both Marlowe s Hero and Leander and Shakespeare s Venus and Adonis can be called Ovidian poems. 26. Byron s Don Juan is written only in rhyming couplets. 27. A Valediction: Of Weeping by John Donne introduces the famous conceit of the two lovers as stiff twin compasses . 28. The Green Knight in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight who challenges Sir Gawain is a dragon disguised as a human. 29. John Donne s The Flea is one of the best English fables of all times. 30. In Edmund Spenser s Sonnet 75 the poet aims at immortalizing his mistress name. 31. "Geoffrey Chaucer lived a monotonous, eventless life."

32.God is never invoked in Blake s poems.

33. La Belle Dame Sans Merci is on of John Keats most beautiful odes. 34. The Cloud in Shelley s eponymous poem calls herself the daughter of Rain and Wind. 35. " Pre-Romantic is the perfect label for the poetry written in England between 1744, the year of Alexander Pope s death, and 1790." 36. Chaucer established the use of couplets in English. 37. Women almost never appear in Anglo-Saxon poetry. 38. The apostrophe is a kind of invocation. 39. The wind as an archetype conveys the symbolic meaning of conception. 40. William Langland wrote some of his poem in French. 41."In Book II of Milton s Paradise Lost, Lucifer repents his betrayal of God." 42. The figure of repetition that occurs in the first quatrain of Shakespeare s Sonnet 91 is anaphora. 43. The idea underlying Shelley s poem With a Guitar. To Jane is that culture is created by enslaving nature.

44. The Gawain poet and the Pearl poet are two of the greatest anonymous poets of the 14th century. 45. Beowulf in the famous Anglo-Saxon epic poem is described as Hygelac s follower. 46. "For William Wordsworth, poetry was the spontaneous overflow of feeble feelings ." 47. The lyric mood in the Anglo-Saxon poetry is almost always the elegiac. 48. "Unlike Shakespeare s Dark Lady, Stella, the mistress in Sir Philip Sidney s sonnets, has blue eyes." 49. Wordsworth was enthusiastic about Coleridge s poem Christabel. 50. "Unlike Christabel, Kubla Khan is not a dreampoem." 51. Adonais is Shelley s elegiac tribute to the dead[___]

52 . An idyll is a short poem describing an incident of [___] life in terms of idealized innocence. 53. The Greeks thought that poetry came from the[___] 54. The heroine of Sir Philip Sidney s sonnet-cycle is named[___]

55. The popular ballads are orally transmitted[___] poems. 56. Lycidas by John Milton is a pastoral[___] 57. The pilgrims in the Canterbury Tales are vividly described in the[___] Prologue. 58. The little girl lamented in the famous 14th century poem Pearl is[___] 59. "In an age of excessive Puritanism, Shakespeare s Venus and Adonis set the standards for what came to be called [___] literature." 60. The colour that appears most often in Andrew Marvell s descriptive poems is[___] 61. John Donne s Elegy XVI humorously comments on the sexual[___] of lovers. 62. Harold Bloom s theory of the anxiety of influence represents the development of poetic tradition as a masculine battle of wills modelled on Freud s concept of the[___] complex. 63. The Spenserian stanza is an English poetic stanza of nine[___] lines. 64. "For Thomas Carlyle, poetry is musical[___]"

65. Christopher Marlowe Hero and Leander may be regarded as an anti-[___] manifesto. 66. The Green Knight in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is the surname of a character whose real name is[___] 67. "Although composed in[___], Beowulf refers to the period long before the Anglo-Saxon invasion." 68. There are[___] main versions of the Preface to Lyrical Ballads. 69. "In the thirteenth chapter of Biographia Literaria, Coleridge draws a parallel between[___] and Imagination. 70. The Owl and the Nightingale combines the features of the debate and the[___] 71. "Alexander Pope s An Essay on Man is considered to be a[___], a work that takes for granted that there is a God, at once powerful and benevolent." 72. "The term sonnet comes from the Italian sonetto, which means little[___] " 73. "In the Petrarchan poetry, the woman was perceived as a fair[___] who inflicted cruel wounds. " 74. John Donne is the poet who challenged and broke the supremacy of the[___] tradition.

75. Shakespeare s Sonnets should not be read as an autobiographical[___] 76. "For Alexander Pope, in Essay on Criticism, [___] is the best guide of judgment." 77. The[___] in the Canterbury Tales embodies the highest ideals of chivalry and courtesy. 78. Blake s cosmogonical theories are presented in The Four[___] 79. "In Byron s poetry, Nature appears closely knit with love and[___]" 80. "In Thomas Gray s Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard, the poet does not sit above, but stands[___], the landscape." 81. Shakespeare s Sonnets 153 and 154 are adaptations of a well- known epigram about[___] 82. "The early popular ballads have a refrain, a repeated line or half-line also known as[___] " 83. "[___] is a rhetorical figure by which the same word or phrase is repeated at the end successive clauses, sentences, or lines." 84. "According to Ted Hughes mythical interpretation of

Shakespeare s longer poems, the heroines perform the role of either huntress or [____] 85."In Going to Bed, John Donne compares his mistress body with[___], his new-found-land." 86. The Anglo-Saxon heroic poems were recited by the itinerant minstrel known as the[___] 87. Shakespeare s The Phoenix and the Turtle has been recently reinterpreted as an[___] for the Catholic martyr Ann Line. 88. Edmund Spenser s Four Hymns illustrates the[___] doctrine revived during the Renaissance by Marsilio Ficino and Giordano Bruno. 89. "In Wordsworth s opinion, expressed in the Preface to Lyrical Ballads, poets do not write for[___] alone, but for men. " 90. End-stopped lines end with a pause often indicated by a [___] mark. 91."Edmund Spenser ended his 88 sonnet-cycle with[___], a poem written in celebration of his own wedding." a. Elegy b. Epigram c. Eclogue d. Epithalamion

92. "For Harold Bloom, the character in Paradise Lost who is granted more of a Shakespearian inner self" a. Adam b. Eve c. Satan d. God 93. Sir Gawain reaches the Green Knight s domain in the eponymous poem on[___] a. Easter Eve b. New Year s Eve c. All Souls Day d. Christmas Eve 94."The opening of John Donne s Songs and Sonnets captures the readers attention, often in the form of a[___]" a. digression b. question c. exclamation d. invocation 95."Although Byron revolted against the poetical conventions of the 18th century, he was a great admirer of a. John Dryden b. John Milton c. John Donne d. Alexander Pope 96. "Unlike Byron, Shelley believed in the idea of " a. love and marriage b. social progress c. telepathy d. metempsychosis

97. "In [___] Alexander Pope creates a fiction according to which London has developed a mad, militant and mercenary publishing industry." a. An Essay on Man b. The Rape of the Lock c. The Dunciad d. Essay on Criticism 98. "Edmund Spenser s The Faerie Queene echoes historical events of 1588, which made possible Queen Elizabeth identification as[___]" a. Astraea b. Britomart c. Cynthia d. Gloriana 99."In Andrew Marvell s To His Coy Mistress, the lover shows that the shy lady s virginity will be tried, after her death, by[___]" a. maggots b. worms c. flies d. bugs 100. Shakespeare s The Phoenix and the Turtle has been interpreted as[___] a. an allegory in the medieval tradition b. a love poem c. a fable d. a topical elegy 101. Milton s long sentences and inverted order of words in Paradise Lost are reminiscent of a. Latin b. French

c. Old English d. Middle English 102. The English sonnet was prosodically reshaped into three quatrains plus a couplet by[___] a. Henry Howard b. Edmund Spenser c. Sir Philip Sidney d. William Shakespeare 103. "More recently, Romanticism has been redefined as a trans-historical forma mentis, which is" a. a perennial mode b. a romantic poetics c. a historical entity d. merely a word 104. "In his Satires, John Donne attacks late 16th century English society calling it the Age of[___]" a. unpolished stone b. unbridled lust c. insatiable sexuality d. rusty iron 105."In Sonnet 130, Shakespeare is the successor of[___] as regards the rejection of Petrarch s clichs of feminine beauty." a. Edmund Spenser b. Sir Philip Sidney c. Christopher Marlowe d. Henry Howard 106. Wordsworth enriched the language of poetry by bringing into use many a. neologisms b. humble words

c. words invented by himself d. words from Latin and Greek 107. "For Wordsworth, poetry originates from emotion recollected in " a. solitude b. tranquillity c. quiet d. serenity 108. Byron was the only English romantic who presented his contemporary world as a. falling apart b. heading towards progress c. reviving the past d. praising the Orient 109.Endymion becomes Keats alter-ego in his search for [___] in life. a. power b. love c. beauty d. happiness 110. Recent criticism has redefined Chaucer as a great[___] a. realist and Marxist b. feminist and ironist c. Romantic and idealist d. Pre-modern and experimental writer 111. "Ovid s Metamorphoses, which inspired Marlowe and Shakespeare, depicted[___] nature." a. an anthropomorphic b. an idealized c. an immutable

d. a devastated 112. The male speakers in John Donne s poems admit their interest in[___] a. money and sex b. virtue and innocence c. religion and morals d. sex and only sex 113. The mistress thoughts in the second stanza of She Walks in Beauty are a. utterly nameless b. dark and bright c. outrageously sinful d. serenely sweet 114. Shelley held comedy in poetry to be a. a crime b. a failure c. a blessing d. essential 115. One of Wordsworth s most famous lines is the child is father of the [___] a. wit b. soul c. life d. man 116. In John Dryden s A Song for Cecilia s Day the whole context of the poem is given by references to[___] a. history b. music c. poetry d. religion

117. [___] is still considered the greatest English satire in verse. a. Manfred b. Don Juan c. Mazeppa d. English Bards and Scotch Reviewers 118. John Keats claimed: imagination is my monastery and I am its[___] a. priest b. monk c. abbot d. prior 119. William Blake s poem The Tiger is written in[___] a. free verse b. blank verse c. rhyming couplets d. crossed rhymes 120. Love in the Songs and Sonnets eliminates [___] which is so visible in John Donne s Elegies. a. sex b. religious thought c. the world d. abstract thinking 121."For John Keats, Beauty is necessarily Truth and Truth is[___]" a. Beauty b. Love c. Divine d. what matters in life 122. The theme of the curse and redemption in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner will be later employed in

a. Richard Wagner s The Flying Dutchman b. Eminescu s Dintre sute de catarge c. Verdi s Rigoletto d. Oscar Wilde s The Ballad of Reading Gaol 123. She Dwelt among the Untrodden Ways is written in a. blank verse b. rhymed couplets c. crossed rhymes d. iambic pentameters 124. The typical Byronic hero is a man of one virtue but a thousand a. vices b. crimes c. sorrows d. dreams 125. The first English poet to be translated on the continent was[___] a. Geoffrey Chaucer b. The Gawain Poet c. John Gower d. William Langland 126. Wordsworth compares the dead girl in She Dwelt among the Untrodden Ways with a. the untrodden ways b. the springs of Dove c. a violet by a mossy stone d. the charmed ocean 127. John Donne s Elegies are poems about[___] a. death b. despair c. grief

d. love 128. Wordsworth s Tintern Abbey lists the stages in the development of the mind from a. childhood to adolescence and to maturity b. birth to childhood and to adolescence c. adolescence to maturity and old age d. maturity to old age and death 129.Edmund Spenser s The Faerie Queene was considered by David Daiches[___] a. a blind alley of English literature b. a path followed by many Spenserian imitators c. a crossroads in literary development d. a highway to poetic perfection 130.For Sir Philips Sidney the poet s first step towards presenting his central idea is[___] a. the choice of words b. the choice of characters c. the choice of subject d. the choice of plot 131.Shelley s second wife was the daughter of the radical philosopher a. Charles Lamb b. Thomas Carlyle c. Matthew Arnold d. William Godwin 132. Coleridge s Gothic elements strongly influenced the poetry of a. Lord Byron b. John Keats c. Edgar Allan Poe d. Walt Whitman

133.Nature in Tintern Abbey is perceived as a a. shelter b. threat c. presence d. absence 134.The Rime of the Ancient Mariner is written in a. the style and metre of the old ballads b. blank verse c. the form of a sonnet d. Spenserian stanzas 135. According to Louis Cazamian the 18th century descriptive poetry seems to have evolved from a. Edward Young s Night Thoughts b. Oliver Goldsmith s The Deserted Village c. James Thomson s The Seasons d. John Milton s Il Penseroso 136.John Keats Lamia is a(n)[___] transformed into a woman a. eagle b. albatross c. serpent d. dragon 137. "Edmund Spenser s Sonnet 75, about transience opens with the graphic image of the mistress name written[___]" a. on the beach b. on the sand c. on the strand d. on the waves

138. The value of Pope s poem Essay on Criticism lies in its a. illustrations of general literary ideas b. originality c. rationalistic trend d. social satire 139. The last stanza of She Walks in Beauty describes the mistress as a. "so quiet, yet telling" b. "so peaceful, yet disturbed" c. "so calm, yet eloquent" d. "so tranquil, yet disturbed" 140. John Dryden s compares Henry Purcell in the Ode dedicated to the late composer to a[___] a. lark b. linnet c. nightingale d. canary 141.The idea of perpetual[___] is evident in Shelley s The Cloud a. stasis b. revolt c. metamorphosis d. transgression 142. The hero in Endymion embarks upon a journey rendered by the image of a. forest and path b. ocean and ship c. camel and desert d. net and labyrinth

143.Byron seems to have studied the painful realisation of the deeper[___] a. fear of death b. beauty of nature c. love of God d. solitude in two 144. The Cloud as a symbol stands for Shelley s conception about a. man s life b. social progress c. democracy d. cosmic immortality 145. Chaucer s irony in the Canterbury Tales is best expressed in the portrait of[___] a. the Plowman b. the Wife of Bath c. the Prioress d. the Monk 146."In Andrew Marvell s To His Coy Mistress, the lover suggests that time can be defeated by the lovers pleasures torn trough the iron gates of[___] " a. life b. love c. hope d. lust 147.Andrew Marvells The Garden ends in[___] playfulness. a. gratuitous b. joyous c. shocking d. self mocking

148. John Donne s Holly Sonnets show the religious man searching for[___] a. the right relationship with God b. the way to Heaven c. redemption d. the forgiveness of his sins 149.Byron is not a great Nature poet but a great[___] a. satirist b. theorist c. dramatist d. rationalist 150. Coleridge s essential contribution to the Romantic movement lay in a return to the magical and a. tricky b. mysterious c. real d. everyday life 151. John Gower created fluent narratives in his poems but he lacked Chaucer s[___] a. vivacity and humour b. cultural background c. rhyming abilities d. variety of subjects 152. The English Romantics had a. a coherent Romantic programme b. no coherent Romantic programme c. a conscious sense of belonging to a movement d. a unified ideology 153.The theme of Kubla Khan is the strange power of a. love b. faith

c. devotion d. imagination 154.Nature in Byron s poems is no longer a distinct topic; it appears closely knitted with[___] a. love and time b. time and adventure c. adventure and love d. love and confession 155. English Romanticism often mixes antithetical ideas, visible in the fact that " a. Shelley attacks Wordsworth and Coleridge b. Pope attacks Byron c. Keats attacks Coleridge d. Byron attacks Shelley 156. Christabel by Coleridge is a Gothic ballad full of the mystery of a. life b. love c. death d. evil 157. "Edmund Spenser, like Petrarch, calls his love[___]" a. sweet angel b. sweet maiden c. sweet warrior d. sweet murderess 158. The narrator of Geoffrey Chaucer s Canterbury Tales is[___] a. Chaucer himself b. an omniscient narrator c. the Yeoman d. the Squire

159. Shelley was a a. Pantheist b. Deist c. Christian d. Atheist 160. The Prelude is a vast poem written in the form of a. letters b. diary c. notes d. autobiography 161. "In Book II of Paradise Regained, Jesus is tempted by Satan through " a. fame and glory b. "glory, power and luxury" c. "power, luxury and riches" d. "luxury, riches and sensuality" 162. In Christopher Marlowe s Hero and Leander hero is shown going to[___] a. the beach of the Hellespont b. the marketplace c. Venus temple d. Iris temple 163. John Gower wrote his only English poem[___] at King Richard II s request. a. Mirour de l Omme b. Speculum Meditantis c. Vox Clamantis d. Confessio Amantis 164. The setting of Stanzas for Music is a. the ocean at midnight b. the mountain at noon

c. the garden at dawn d. the meadow at dusk 165. The dead girl in She Dwelt among the Untrodden Ways a. spent her life anonymously b. was the most popular girl in her village c. was transformed into a star d. was resurrected from her tomb 166. The figure of repetition that appears most often in the first quatrain of Shakespeare s Sonnet 91 a. anadiplosis b. anaphora c. epistrophe d. epizeuxis 167. Chaucer s pilgrims in the Canterbury Tales represent[___] a. a single social class b. two social classes c. all the social classes d. almost all the social classes 168. "Traditionally, literary histories define Romanticism as the historical period" a. from 1750 to 1800 b. from 1790 to 1810 c. from 1790 to 1830 d. from 1800 to 1850 169. Spenser s immediate model in writing The Faerie Queene was a. Ovid s Metamorphoses b. Lucretius De Rerum Natura c. Thomas Mallory s Morte Darthur

d. Lodovico Ariosto s Orlando furioso 170. The mistress voice in Stanzas for Music is compared with a. music b. a skylark c. a nightingale d. the murmur of the ocean 171. The first English poet to write a sonnet was[___] a. William Caxton b. Thomas Wyatt c. Henry Howard d. John Soowthern 172. "In Andrew Marvell s To His Coy Mistress, the lady is shown finding[___] somewhere in India." a. diamonds b. pearls c. emeralds d. rubies 173. The Romantics [___]. stands proof for their interest in self- analysis. a. diversitarianism b. striving for the infinite c. confessionalism d. deep feeling of Nature 174 . She Walks in Beauty is written in a. blank verse b. rhymed couplets c. crossed rhymes d. iambic pentameters 175. The figure of repetition that appears most often in Shakespeare s Sonnet 66 is[___]

a. anadiplosis b. anaphora c. epistrophe d. epizeuxis 176. "The Rape of the Lock is, above all, a(n)[___] " a. Homeric epic b. Touching elegy c. Ode to Reason d. Social Satire 177. Harold Bloom considers the Wife of Bath in Chaucher s Canterbury Tales the most exuberant literary character ever created before Shakespeare s[___] a. Touchstone b. Feste c. Falstaff d. Sir Toby Belch 178. In The Seasons Thomson described[___] a. The English estates of his politician-patrons b. Rural England c. The English Forests d. The Parks of London 179. "Chaucer s The Legend of Good Women presents women as betrayed victims, answering the picture of woman as betrayer, which appear in his earlier poem[___]" a. The Book of the Duchess b. The Parliament of Fowls c. Troilus and Criseyde d. The Canterbury Tales 180. Charles Lamb considered Coleridge a damaged a. archangel b. brain

c. steam engine d. boiler 181. Critics consider Wordsworth a a. Christian b. Deist c. Rationalist d. Pantheist 182. Adonais is a memorable elegy written in memory of a. Thomas Grey b. William Shakespeare c. Lord Byron d. John Keats 183. One of the main features of Romanticism is the preference for[___] instead of imitations. a. the love of beauty b. the cultivation of solitude c. cosmic visions d. originality 184. In the poem The Castaway Cowper pictures his own [___] a. shipwreck b. death c. survival d. despair 185. Milton s On Shakespeare is [___] a. a brief epigram b. a sonnet c. an elegy d. an ode 186. The essence of Romanticism is that it created a symbolical language

a. for asking questions b. for recording answers c. to imitate Nature d. to express Love 187. Andrew Marvell s two analytic devices are the fantastic hypothesis and[___] a. hyperbole b. mythological allusion c. geographical discovery d. mathematical description 188. "In Paradise Lost, when Satan sees Eve in Eden suddenly feels he is[___]" a. good b. jealous c. wicked d. horny 189. The later 18th century poetry has been recently redefined as[___] a. Augustan poetry b. Poetry of Sensibility c. Neo-classic poetry d. Graveyard poetry 190. Marvell s The Garden has often been compared with[___] a. Keats Ode to Autumn b. Milton s Paradise Regained c. Wordsworth s I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud d. Shelley s Ode to the West Wind 191. The distinctive feature of Wordsworth s innovation remains a. simplicity

b. sophistication c. musicality d. stream of consciousness 192. Stella in Sir Philip Sidney Sonnets is famous for her[___] eyes. a. black b. blue c. green d. brown 193. The [___] is one of Byron s favourite figures of speech a. linguistic repetition b. chiasmus c. bathos or anticlimax d. metaphor 194. Shelley s dramatic poem inspired by Aeschylus is a. Epipsychidion b. Prometheus Unbound c. Alastor d. Adonais 195. Harold Bloom has described Milton s Paradise Lost as most powerful[___] a. thriller b. erotic fantasy c. science-fiction d. whodunit 196. The mistress portrait in the first stanza of She Walks in Beauty is constructed around the pair of antonyms a. ugly beautiful b. guilty innocent c. lustful shy d. dark - bright

197. William Blake s poem London is written in[___] a. free verse b. blank verse c. rhyming couplets d. crossed rhymes 198. "In Samson Agonistes, John Milton shows us" a. An exotic world b. A familiar world c. Paradise d. Hell 199. William Cowper s God is an[___] God. a. ecstatic b. angry c. awesome d. understanding 200. "For Coleridge, the willing suspension of disbelief for the moment constitutes " a. the horizon of expectation b. the source of imagination c. poetic faith d. the essence of poetry 201. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is written in[___] a. French octosyllabic couplets b. long alliterative lines and short rhyming ones c. iambic pentameters d. blank verse 202. The Preface to Lyrical Ballads rejected notions like a. the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings b. poetic diction c. subjective feelings emerging from one s experience

d. the humble and rustic life of people 203. The topics to which Geoffrey Chaucer s pilgrims constantly return in the Canterbury Tales are[___] a. patriotism and nationalism b. patience and obedience c. innocence and virtue d. love and marriage 204. In Ode to a Nightingale the bird in the sky is gradually transformed into a symbol of a. erotic love b. immortal love c. imaginative art d. cosmic principle 205. Prometheus Unbound is made up of chants in praise of a. Greek Mythology b. Love c. Democracy d. Life 206. In Christopher Marlowe s Hero and Leander the lover crosses the Hellespont to meet his mistress in[___] a. Sestos b. Ephesus c. Millet d. Syracuse 207. "In his poem Going to Bed, John Donne insists on the importance of[___]" a. virginity before marriage b. evening prayers c. sexual love d. mutual affection

208. "In Sir Philip Sidney s opinion, poetry is a better moral teacher than[___]" a. life itself b. philosophy or history c. philosophy or religion d. religion or ethics 209. The name of the girl recalled in Wordsworth s She Dwelt among the Untrodden Ways is a. Dove b. Maid c. Violet d. Lucy 210. "Harold Bloom considers the Pardoner in Chaucher s Canterbury Tales a supreme moral psychologist and a great deceiver, like Shakespeare s[___]" a. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern b. Iago and Edmund c. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth d. Rosalind and Celia

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