English Literature - Read Mode

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A
Keats
B
Donne
C
Blake
D
Spenser

Explanation

William Blake was both a highly original poet and a skilled painter and printmaker. He illustrated his own poems in ‘Songs of Innocence and of Experience’ using a unique relief etching process.

A
P.B. Shelley
B
William Wordsworth
C
John Keats
D
T.S. Elliot

Explanation

William Wordsworth is celebrated as the ‘Poet of Nature’. His philosophy centered on the idea that nature nurtures the human soul, a theme pervasive in works like ‘Tintern Abbey’.

A
John Keats
B
William Wordsworth
C
Lord Byron
D
Loard Tennyson

Explanation

William Wordsworth is known as the ‘Poet of Nature’ in England. He was a central figure of the Romantic movement and focused on the spiritual relationship between humanity and the natural world.

A
P.B. Shelley
B
Lord Byron
C
William Wordsworth
D
John Keats

Explanation

John Keats is called the ‘Poet of Beauty’. He famously wrote “A thing of beauty is a joy for ever” and believed that the pursuit of beauty was the central aim of poetry and life.

A
Beauty
B
Nature
C
Love
D
Revolution

Explanation

John Keats is primarily a poet of Beauty. His odes and sonnets are dedicated to the exploration of aesthetic beauty and its relationship to truth, as summarized in his ‘Ode on a Grecian Urn’.

A
Walter Scot
B
Lord Byron
C
John Keats
D
John Austin

Explanation

Lord Byron is considered the ‘Rebel Poet’ of the Romantic era. His life and works defied social conventions, and his ‘Byronic heroes’ are characterized by rebellion, melancholy, and individualism.

A
Lord Byron
B
John Keats
C
W. Wordsworth
D
P.B. Shelley

Explanation

Percy Bysshe Shelley is known as the Poet of the Skylark and Winds due to his famous poems ‘To a Skylark’ and ‘Ode to the West Wind’, where these elements symbolize freedom and inspiration.

A
G.B. Shaw
B
Shakespeare
C
P.B. Shelley
D
William Wordsworth

Explanation

In the context of modern drama and thought, George Bernard Shaw is often cited. While Chaucer is the father of English Lit, Shaw is a foundational figure for the modern period (20th century).

A
17th century
B
14th century
C
16th century
D
18th century

Explanation

Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1343–1400) is the representative poet of the 14th century. His work ‘The Canterbury Tales’ provides a vivid panorama of English society during the Middle Ages.

A
Anglo-Norman
B
Anglo-Saxon
C
Chaucer's period
D
Middle age

Explanation

The Anglo-Saxon period (or Old English period) is the oldest, dating from around 450 AD to the Norman Conquest in 1066. ‘Beowulf’ is the most famous work from this era.