English Literature - Read Mode

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A
W.B. Yeats
B
T.S Eliot
C
Walter scon
D
Robert Browing

Explanation

This poem is the first professionally published poem by American-British poet T.S. Eliot, often seen as a masterpiece of the Modernist movement.

A
Samuel Beckeit
B
Henry Livings
C
Harold Pinter
D
Arthur Miler

Explanation

'The Birthday Party' (1957) is one of Harold Pinter's best-known plays, often classified as a comedy of menace.

A
H.G. Wells
B
Samuel Butler
C
Henry James
D
George Moore

Explanation

'The Time Machine' is a science fiction novella by H.G. Wells, published in 1895, popularizing the concept of time travel using a vehicle.

A
Robert Browing
B
mattew anold
C
Alfred temyson
D
lord byron

Explanation

These are the concluding lines of Alfred, Lord Tennyson's poem 'Ulysses', reflecting the Victorian spirit of determination.

A
king lear
B
macbeth
C
as you like it
D
hamlet

Explanation

Hamlet speaks this line to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern in Act 2, Scene 2 of Shakespeare's 'Hamlet', discussing his view of Denmark as a prison.

A
A christmas Carol
B
A tale of Two Cities
C
Oliver Twist
D
Great Expectations

Explanation

Pip (Philip Pirrip) is the protagonist and narrator of Charles Dickens's novel 'Great Expectations', chronicling his growth and personal development.

A
Lord Jim
B
The Rainbow
C
Ulysses
D
A passage to India

Explanation

D.H. Lawrence wrote 'Lady Chatterley's Lover'. He is also the author of 'The Rainbow'.

A
G.B. Shaw
B
Y.B. Yeats
C
Thomas Hardy
D
Charles Dickens

Explanation

'Man and Superman' is a four-act drama written by George Bernard Shaw in 1903, playing on the concept of the Übermensch.

A
Disraeli
B
Emerson
C
Gladstone
D
Shakespeare

Explanation

While the origin is debated, William E. Gladstone is often cited in this context regarding legal reform in the 19th century.

A
William Wordsworth
B
John Keats
C
Charles Dickens
D
John Milton

Explanation

Charles Dickens was a celebrated novelist, unlike Wordsworth, Keats, and Milton, who were primarily known as poets.