English Literature - Read Mode

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A
Macbeth
B
Lady Macbeth
C
Lady Macduff
D
Macduff

Explanation

Lady Macbeth says this in the famous sleepwalking scene of Shakespeare's ‘Macbeth’. It reveals her guilt and psychological unraveling as she imagines the smell of blood still on her hands.

A
William Wordsworth
B
Robert Browing
C
John Keats
D
Samuel Coleridge

Explanation

These lines are from John Keats's poem ‘To Autumn’. He addresses the season of Autumn, reassuring it that it possesses its own unique beauty and music, distinct from the songs of Spring.

A
Mr Eamshaw
B
Catherine
C
Heatheliff
D
Hindley Earnshaw

Explanation

Heathcliff is the brooding, vengeful protagonist of ‘Wuthering Heights’. His obsessive love for Catherine Earnshaw and his subsequent revenge against those who wronged him drive the novel's plot.

A
The Lotos Eaters
B
Tithous
C
Locksley Hall
D
Morte d' Arthur

Explanation

This famous line is spoken by King Arthur in Tennyson's poem ‘Morte d'Arthur’. It reflects on the inevitable passage of time and the idea that change is necessary for God's will to be fulfilled.

A
George Herbert
B
Andrew Marvell
C
John Donne
D
Henry Vaughan

Explanation

‘The Good-Morrow’ is a poem by John Donne. It is a classic example of metaphysical poetry, where the speaker celebrates a love that awakens the soul and makes the lovers' bedroom an entire world.

A
Alexander Pope
B
Jonathan Swift
C
William Wordsworth
D
G.B. Shaw

Explanation

‘Gulliver's Travels’ is a satire by Jonathan Swift, published in 1726. It recounts the voyages of Lemuel Gulliver to strange lands, using these journeys to satirize human nature and European society.

A
An elephant of white colour
B
A very costly and troublesome possession
C
A black marketer
D
A hoarder

Explanation

A ‘White Elephant’ refers to a possession that is useless or troublesome, especially one that is expensive to maintain or difficult to dispose of. The term originates from the story of kings of Siam.

A
A jew
B
A roman
C
Turk
D
A Moor

Explanation

The play is titled ‘Othello, the Moor of Venice’. The protagonist is a Moorish general in the Venetian army, and his racial background is a key element in the play's themes of prejudice and isolation.

A
William Shakespeare
B
John Milton
C
P. B. Shelley
D
Alfred Tennyson

Explanation

‘Paradise Lost’ is an epic poem in blank verse by the 17th-century English poet John Milton. It is widely considered one of the greatest works of literature ever written.

A
Ernest Hemingway
B
T. S. Eliot
C
W. B. Yeats
D
Jean Paul Sartre

Explanation

Jean-Paul Sartre, the French existentialist philosopher and writer, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1964. However, he declined it, stating he always refused official honors.