
ENGL 102 ENGL102 Module 5 Test 2 (Liberty University)
ENGL 102 Module 5 Test 2
- In line 3, the boy is calling out his trade; instead of “sweep,” he cries “weep weep weep weep.” This is the poet’s way of telling the reader that __________.
- The dream in lines 11-20 is a miniature allegory that has several analogies to the world in which the boys live. The “green plain” (line 15) represents __________.
- The poet protests against child labor and condemns the harm done to children exploited in this practice. Yet in lines 23-24, the child narrator writes that “Tho' the morning was cold, Tom was happy and warm / So if all do their duty, they need not fear harm.” This is an ironic expression of the narrator’s __________.
- In line 3, the boy is calling out his trade; instead of “sweep,” he cries “weep weep weep weep.” This is the poet’s way of telling the reader that __________.
- In lines 7-8, the narrator is trying to ________ Tom when he tells him, “Hush Tom never mind it, for when your head's bare, / You know that the soot cannot spoil your white hair.”
- To paraphrase content is to be able to summarize a work, to offer its core idea(s).
- The poem, "Fern Hill," was written by Dylan Thomas.
- Understatement downplays or intentionally minimizes something.
- Samuel Johnson defined poetry as "The art of uniting pleasure with truth by calling imagination to the help of reason."
- "In an "Ode to a Nightingale," the bird's song is eternal.
- Since "all truth is God's truth," we may freely go to poetry to find truth instead of using God's revelation to us in the Bible to judge poetry
- "To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield" is from what poem?
- Assonance is the repetition at close intervals of the final consonant sounds of accented syllables or important words.
- In _____ rhyme sounds, the repeated sound is in the final syllable of the words involved (e.g., "sight" and "light").
- Frost uses direct methods to communicate his theme in "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening."
- Personification is the imaginative identification of two dissimilar objects or ideas.
- Theme is the unifying generalization of a literary work.
- The poem, "Ozymandias," was written by Percy Bysshe Shelley.
- "Dover Beach" alludes to Horace.
- Dimeter is a metrical line containing ten feet.
- Tennyson's "Ulysses" is a symbol of the existential dilemma.
- Tropes often merge with each other to build a continuum.
- The phrase "frigate like a book" is an example of a metaphor.
- Connotation is a word's overtones of meaning.
- The speaker of "The Chimney Sweeper" is a dead boy.
- Another name for Petrarchan sonnet is
- Stressed and unstressed syllables are indicated by diacritical marks.
- The following is an excerpt from "Kubla Khan": "It little profits that an idle king…"
- "Design's" premise is that
- "Chimney Sweeper" uses a dichotomy between the horror that the children experience and what is said.
- William Blake wrote "The Tiger."
- "A poem," according to M. H. Riken, "is produced by a poet, takes its subject matter from the universe of men, things, and events, and is addressed to, or made available to, an audience of hearers or readers."
- Lines 11-12 of Gerard Manley Hopkins’ “God’s Grandeur” reads: “And though the last lights off the black West went / Oh, morning, at the brown brink eastward, springs—” The images of sunset and sunrise symbolize God’s __________.
- "Nothing beside remains" is a significant phrase in what poem?
- According to Emily Dickinson, "[Poetry] makes my body so cold that no fire can warm me ... and makes me feel as if the top of my head were taken off"
- The major figure of speech often used to interpret Shelley's "Ozymandias" is irony of situation.
- According to the work-text/textbook, _____ is a writer's or speaker's attitude toward the subject, the audience, or herself or himself.
- "Ode to a Grecian Urn" has the following phrase: "beauty is truth, truth beauty."
- Dover Beach overlooks Norway.
- The bald eagle represents freedom, majesty, and strength. This is an example of a(n)
- The bald eagle represents freedom, majesty, and strength. This is an example of a(n)
- A metaphor may have one of four forms.
- Some poems are organized in a continuous form without stanzas.
- A hyperbole is simply exaggeration, but exaggeration in the service of truth.
- "Dover Beach" begins with an idyllic scene that soon changes to a fierce attack.
- A metaphor is the imaginative identification of two similar objects.
- "Kubla Khan" represents an extended metaphor.
- A poem can be organized without stanza breaks, refrain, or rhythm.
- Which of the following poem was written by John Donne
- Irony is the situation or use of language involving some kind of incongruity or discrepancy.