English Literature - Read Mode

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A
William Shakespeare
B
G.B. Shaw
C
W. B. Yeats
D
John Dryden

Explanation

‘The Taming of the Shrew’ is a comedy by William Shakespeare. It depicts the courtship of Petruchio and Katherina, dealing with themes of gender roles and marriage.

A
নাটক
B
উপন্যাস
C
প্রবন্ধ
D
কবিতা

Explanation

Macbeth is a play (নাটক), specifically a tragedy, by William Shakespeare. It is not a novel or a poem, but a dramatic work intended for performance.

A
Victorian
B
Elizabethan
C
Romantic
D
Modern

Explanation

‘David Copperfield’ is a novel by Charles Dickens, published in 1850. It is a classic example of Victorian literature, reflecting the social and moral concerns of 19th-century England.

A
G.B. Shaw
B
Ben Jonson
C
William Shakespeare
D
Harold Pinter

Explanation

‘Macbeth’ is a famous tragedy written by William Shakespeare. It tells the story of a Scottish general's rise to power through murder and his subsequent fall.

A
a poet of nature
B
a poet of love
C
a poet of human nature
D
a poet of liberty

Explanation

William Wordsworth is pre-eminently a poet of nature. His poetry emphasizes the spiritual and emotional connection between the human mind and the natural environment.

A
Francis Bacon
B
Geoffery Chaucer
C
Henry Fielding
D
King Alfred the Great

Explanation

Henry Fielding is often called the ‘Father of the English Novel’ (along with others like Defoe and Richardson). His work ‘Tom Jones’ helped define the structure and realism of the modern novel.

A
William Langland
B
Thomas More
C
Roger Bacon
D
Geoffery Chaucer

Explanation

Geoffrey Chaucer is considered the Father of English Poetry. His masterpiece, ‘The Canterbury Tales’, legitimized the use of Middle English for literary purposes over French or Latin.

A
Geoffery Chaucer
B
Edmund Spenser
C
Thomas Kyd
D
William Shakespeare

Explanation

Edmund Spenser is known as the ‘Poet's Poet’. Charles Lamb gave him this title because his intricate verse, particularly in ‘The Faerie Queene’, inspired generations of later poets.

A
Lord Byron
B
John Milton
C
Alexander Pope
D
Loard Tennyson

Explanation

Alexander Pope is the most famous mock-heroic poet. His ‘The Rape of the Lock’ is the quintessential example of the genre, applying high epic style to a trivial subject for satirical effect.

A
John Keats
B
John Milton
C
William Wordsworth
D
Loard Tennyson

Explanation

John Milton is the pre-eminent English epic poet. His masterpiece ‘Paradise Lost’ is an epic poem in the tradition of Homer and Virgil, but dealing with Judeo-Christian themes.