Tuesday, 22 January 2019

Unit-II Part-IX



1.      In one of his novels Hardy says, “Happiness is but an occasional episode in the general drama of pain.” In which novel do these lines appear?
                        a.  Jude the Obscure                             
                        b. The Mayor of Casterbridge
                        c.  The Return of the Native                  
                        d. Tess of the D’Urbervilles
2.      Which work of Dickens has as many as three hundred and fifty six characters :
                        a.  Oliver Twist                                     
                        b. A Tale of Two Cities
                        c.  Pickwick Papers                                 
                        d. David Copperfield
3.      Who has used these words : “that monstrous tuberosity of Civilized Life the Capital of England”?
                        a.  Carlyle                  
                        b. Newman                     
                        c. Swinburne            
                        d. Ruskin
4.      Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys is a rewriting of :
                        a.  George Eliot’s Silas Marner                        
                        b. Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights
                        c.  Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice                  
                        d. Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre
5.      Identify the poet who wrote,
“Where are the songs of Spring? Ay, where are they?
Think not of them, thou hast thy music too, ………….”
                  a.  William Wordsworth   
                  b. William Blake             
                  c. P.B. Shelley       
                  d. John Keats
6.      The dominant note of Wordsworth’s poetry is :
                        a.  Ecstatic              
                        b. Tragic                          
                        c. Gay               
                        d. Restorative
7.      Which of the following is considered an autobiographical poem of William Wordsworth?
                        a.  Lyrical Ballads        
                        b. The Excursion 
                        c. The Prelude           
                        d. Michael : A Pastoral Poem
8.      “We look before and after and
Pine for what is not.” Whose wrote the lines?
                  a.  Byron                   
                  b. Coleridge           
                  c. Keats                     
                  d. Shelley
9.      Who is the author of Manfred and Cain?
                        a.  Byron                 
                        b. Keats                
                        c. Milton               
                        d. Shelley
10.   Who has written Indian Jugglers?
                        a.  Charles Lamb           
                        b. Jonathan Swift                
                        c. Lord Macaulay         
                        d. William Hazlitt
11.   “Ah, love, let us be true
To be another! For the world, which seems
To lie before us, like a lad of dreams,
So various, so beautiful, so new” – These lines are written by :
                  a. Tennyson              
                  b. Arnold                         
                  c. Browning              
                  d. Hardy
12.   “Sunset and evening star
And one clear call for me!” – These lines occur in the poem :
                  a.  Idylls of the King 
                  b. In Memoriam          
                  c. Crossing the Bar                
                  d. Morte d’ Arthur
13.   Charles Dickens’ Hard Times centrally deals with :
                        a.  Moral problems       
                        b. Religious problems    
                        c. Political problems   
                        d. Social and industrial problems
14.   The young man that Dorothea falls in love in Middlemarch with is :
                        a.  Will Ladislaw            
                        b. Sir James Chettam         
                        c. Fred Vincy          
                        d. Dr. Lydgate
15.   The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is a fictional work of :
                        a.  Robert Stevenson      
                        b. J.M. Barrie                      
                        c. Ian Maclaren         
                        d. S.R. Crockett
16.   “God is in heaven and all is right with the world.” This line is from :
                        a.  Pippa Passes             
                        b. My Last Duchess     
                        c. Two in the Campagna           
                        d. Meeting at Night
17.   Lady Bracknell is a character in :
                        a.  The Importance of Being Earnest                 
                        b. Junro and the Paycock
                        c.  Mr. Warren’s Profession                             
                        d. Justice
18.   Who is NOT a Lake Poet?
                        a.  Francis G. Jeffrey     
                        b. Samuel T. Coleridge            
                        c. William Wordsworth                 
                        d. Robert Southey
19.   “The morning waters at their priest like task
Of pure ablution round earth’s human shores.” – These lines have been taken from John Keats’ :
                  a.  On His First Looking at Chapman’s Homer        
                  b. Bright Star
                  c.  The Eve of St. Agnes                         
                  d. La Belle Dame Sans Merci
20.   The songs that show the contrary states of the human soul are :
                        a.  Songs of Innocence                            
                        b. Songs of Experience
                        c.  Songs of Innocence and Experience                     
                        d. Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience
21.   The word “gusto” is associated with the writer :
                        a.  Leigh Hunt                 
                        b. William Hazlitt                
                        c. Lord Byron         
                        d. William Blake
22.   The Confession of an English Opium Eater tells the story of the early life of :
                        a.  Landor         
                        b. Thomas de Quincey        
                        c. Sydney Smith        
                        d. Thomas Love Peacock
23.   The scatter-brained Mr. Brooke is a character in the novel :
                        a.  Daniel Deronda          
                        b. Romola                
                        c. Middlemarch          
                        d. Felix Holt
24.   Match the years of publication :
                 i.          David Copperfield                                                   -              (a)1854
                ii.          Hard Times                                                              -              (b)1849-50
               iii.          Great Expectations                                                -              (c)1859
               iv.          A Tale of Two Cities                                               -              (d)1860-61
                  a.  (i)-a, (ii)-c, (iii)-b, (iv)-d               
                  b. (i)-b, (ii)-a, (iii)-d, (iv)-c        
                  c. (i)-c, (ii)-d, (iii)-a, (iv)-b
                  d. (i)-d, (ii)-b, (iii)-c, (iv)-a
25.   The modern age, as we now call it, first began as a movement in :
                        a.  Literature              
                        b. Science              
                        c. Fine Arts              
                        d. Philosophy
26.   Identify the Romantic poem which has an element of humour in it :
                        a.  The Prelude              
                        b. Lamia          
                        c. Hours of Idleness    
                        d. Peter Bell, the Third
27.   Name the novel of Jane Austen in which a young Parson is a desirable suitor and prospective husband for a sensible young girl :
                        a.  Pride and Prejudice   
                        b. Emma                  
                        c. Mansfield Park 
                        d. Northanger Abbey
28.   She Walks in Beauty’ is a poem written by :
                        a.  John Keats                
                        b. R.W. Emerson          
                        c. Lord Byron             
                        d. P.B. Shelley
29.   On Murder Considered as one of the Fine Arts is written by :
                        a.  Robert Morrison        
                        b. Thomas De Quincey         
                        c. Alexander Morris        
                        d. Alexander Dumas
30.   “For he on honey-dew hath fed,
And drunk the milk of Paradise.” – Identify the poem :
                  a.  Kubla Khan     
                  b. Christabel            
                  c. Dejection an Ode  
                  d. The Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner
31.   Charles Dickens’, A Tale of Two Cities was inspired by :
a. The French Revolution by Carlyle
b. On Liberty by John Stuart Mill
c.  Essays Critical and Historical by T.B. Macaulay
d. Reflections on the Revolution in France by Edmund Burke
32.   Identify the autobiographical novel of George Eliot :
                        a.  Middlemarch          
                        b. The Mill on the Floss          
                        c. Daniel Deronda       
                        d. Adam Bede
33.   Identify the poem in which the following lines occur :
“The old order changeth, yielding place to new,
And God fulfils Himself in many ways.”
                  a.  In Memoriam         
                  b. Ulysses         
                  c. Morte d’ Arthur               
                  d. The Lady of Shallot
34.   Name the author of the work Modern Painters :
                        a.  John Ruskin          
                        b. William Morris                
                        c. Walter Pater          
                        d. Christina Rossetti
35.   Wordsworth’s Prelude is :
                        a.  Allegorical Poem         
                        b. Metaphysical Poem       
                        c. Autobiographical Poem          
                        d. Biographical Poem
36.   “It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of good fortune must be in want of a wife.” In which novel of Jane Austen does this sentence occur?
                        a.  Pride and Prejudice     
                        b. Sense and Sensibility      
                        c. Emma                
                        d. Persuasion
37.   “A thing of beauty is a joy for ever.” A verse tale of Keats begins with this line. Identify the tale :
                        a.  Hyperion  
                        b. Endymion             
                        c. The Eve of St. Agnes         
                        d. Eve of St. Mark
38.   “God is in his Heaven
All is right with the world!” In which poem do these lines occur?
                  a.  The Last Ride Together         
                  b. Rabbi Ben Ezra        
                  c. My Last Duchess       
                  d. Pippa Passes
39.   Which of the following arrangements of the authors is in the chronological order according to their dates of Birth?
a. John Ruskin, Matthew Arnold, Thackeray, Browning
b. Thackeray, Browning, John Ruskin, Matthew Arnold
c.  Browning, John Ruskin, Matthew Arnold, Thackeray
d. Matthew Arnold, Browning, Thackeray, John Ruskin
40.   Which of the following author-book pair is correct?
a. Idea of a University – John Newman
b. Modern Painters – George Eliot
c.  News from Nowhere – Swinburne
d. Nightmare Abbey – Morris
41.   In which poem do the following lines occur :
“Winter is come and gone,
But grief returns with the revolving year.”

                  a.  Thyrsis                  
                  b. The Scholar Gypsy           
                  c. In Memoriam       
                  d. Adonais
42.   Which of the following novels is called a “Novel without a Hero”?
                        a.   Mill on the Floss
                        b. Vanity Fair                  
                        c. A Tale of Two Cities        
                        d. Wuthering Heights
43.   Identify the work which deals with the motif of incest :
                        a.  The Cenci            
                        b. Christabel             
                        c. Don Juan                      
                        d. Eve of St. Agnes
44.   The following novel of Sir Walter Scott has medieval element in it :
                        a.  Ivanhoe                
                        b. The Monastery      
                        c. Kenilworth              
                        d. The Heart of Midolathian
45.   Coleridge’s poem ‘Love’ is addressed to :
                        a.  Sara Hutchinson 
                        b. Dorothy Wordsworth        
                        c. Anne Smith      
                        d. Stella Martin
46.   In which of the following works, the element of pathos is found?
                        a.  On Going a Journey       
                        b. Dream Children       
                        c. Confession of an Opium Eater            
                        d. Table Talk
47.   “Where are the songs of Spring? Ay, where are they?
Think not of them, thou hast thy Music too ……” Identify the poem :
                  a.   Ode to Nightingale     
                  b. Ode to Autumn       
                  c. Ode to Psyche           
                  d. Ode to Melancholy
48.   ‘Reader, I married him.’ Which novel ends with this statement?
                        a.  Wuthering Heights     
                        b. Jane Eyre           
                        c. Silas Marner              
                        d. Ruth
49.   Which one of the following poems is NOT a dramatic monologue?
                        a.  Two in the Campagna     
                        b. Meeting at Night     
                        c. Rabbi Ben Ezra                 
                        d. My last Duchess
50.   Identify the figure who is NOT associated with utilitarianism :
                        a.  John Stuart Mill      
                        b. James Mill       
                        c. Jeremy Bentham       
                        d. Thomas Carlyle
51.   Identify the correct chronological order of the works from among the following options :
a. In Memoriam, Pippa Passes, Sartor Resartus, Culture and Anarchy
b. Sartor Resartus, Pippa Passes, In Memoriam, Culture and Anarchy
c.  Culture and Anarchy, Sartor Resartus, Pippa Passes, In Memoriam
d. Pippa Passes, Sartor Resartus, Culture and Anarchy, In Memoriam
52.   Which eighteenth century poem provided Thomas Hardy the title of his novel Far From the Madding Crowd?
                        a.  Thomson’s Seasons     
                        b. Cowper’s Table Talk          
                        c. Gray’s Elegy     
                        d. Collin’s Ode to Evening
53.   To which event do the following lines of Wordsworth refer?
“Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive,
But to be young was very heaven!”
                  a.   Glorious Revolution                            
                  b. The French Revolution
                  c.  The Napoleonic Wars                                   
                  d. The American War of Independence
54.   In his which work does Wordsworth declare that there are in our existence “spots of time” or moments of imaginative insights whereby our minds are ‘nourished’ and renovated about the deadly weight of trivial and present occupation?
                        a.  Preface to Lyrical Ballads                       
                        b. Daffodils
                        c.  Prelude                              
                        d. Tintern Abbey
55.   The Gothic novel and its readers are satirized in which work?
a. Jane Austen, Northanger Abbey                                
b. Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay, Rajmohan’s Wife
c.  Smollett, Ferdinand Count Fathom
d. Edgar Allan Poe, The Fall of the House of Usher
56.   ………….. the very word is like a bell to toll me back from thee to my sole self! Which word?
                        a.  Bird                  
                        b. Forlorn                   
                        c. Immortal            
                        d. Fancy
57.   Who of the following was NOT a contemporary of Wordsworth and Coleridge?
                        a.  Robert Southey        
                        b. Sir Walter Scott             
                        c. William Hazlitt         
                        d. A.C. Swinburne
58.   Which of the following did NOT influence Victorian intellectual discourse?
                        a.  Thomas Carlyle          
                        b. Charles Darwin             
                        c. Karl Marx            
                        d. Bertrand Russell
59.   The only Dickens novel with picaresque element is :
                        a.  A Tale of Two Cities                                     
                        b. Hard Times
                        c.  Pickwick Papers                                
                        d. Great Expectations
60.   “Sunset and evening star
And one clear call for me” – these lines occur in the poem :
                  a.  In Memoriam              
                  b. Crossing the Bar            
                  c. Idylls of the King         
                  d. Morte d’Arthur
61.   Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice starts with the famous statement: 'It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.' As we get to read the novel this statement seems to be made from the point of view of :
                        a.  The surrounding families                      
                        b. Mrs. Bennet
                        c.  Mr. Bennet                                                                    
                        d. The women of Jane Austen’s age and society
62.   Which poem of Shelley was known as the ‘Chartist’s Bible’?
                        a.  Prometheus Unbound                            
                        b. Queen Mab
                        c.  The Revolt of Islam                               
                        d. Ode to the West Wind
63.   The following work of Byron does not have the typical ‘Byronic Hero’?
                        a.  Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage                                
                        b. Manfred
                        c.  The Vision of Judgement                          
                        d. Cain
64.   “Thou wast not born for death, Immortal Bird”. In what sense is the bird “immortal” as compared to mortal man?
                 i.          Here man as an individual is unfairly compared to a bird as a species.
                ii.          The word “Bird” stands for the nightingale’s song.
               iii.          When compared as a species man is equally “immortal” as the Bird.
               iv.          The Bird is “immortal” because songs of birds have given pleasure to man through the ages.
                  a.  Only (i) and (iii) are correct                                  
                  b. Only (iv) is incorrect
                  c.  Only (ii) and (iv) are correct                                 
                  d. Only (i) and (iv) are correct
65.   On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer’ was written by :
                        a.  Matthew Arnold 
                        b. John Keats           
                        c. William Wordsworth            
                        d. Lord Byron
66.   Identify a play in the following list that is NOT written by Oscar Wilde :
                        a.   A Woman of No Importance                       
                        b. The Importance of Being Earnest
                        c.  Saints and Sinners                                      
                        d. An Ideal Husband
67.   Thrushcross Grange is an important locale in :
                        a.  Jane Eyre               
                        b. Shirley              
                        c. Wuthering Heights            
                        d. The Governess
68.   Match the titles of the following poems by Tennyson with their opening lines :
                 i.          Tithonus                                     -              (a)”Courage” he said and points towards the land
                ii.          The Lotus-Eaters                      -              (b)The woods decay, the woods decay and fall
               iii.          Ulysses                                      -              (c)On either side the river lie // Long fields of barley and of rye
               iv.          The Lady of Shallott                 -              (d)It little profits that an idle king
     By this still hearth, among these barren crags
a.  (i)-a, (ii)-c, (iii)-b, (iv)-d      
b. (i)-b, (ii)-a, (iii)-d, (iv)-c         
c. (i)-c, (ii)-d, (iii)-a, (iv)-b
d. (i)-d, (ii)-b, (iii)-c, (iv)-a
69.   Identify the poet whose poems approximate painting :
                        a.  Matthew Arnold 
                        b. D.G. Rossetti         
                        c. A.H. Clough              
                        d. Robert Browning
70.   Sprung rhythm, Inscape and Instress are the terms associated with the poet :
                        a.  G.M. Hopkins         
                        b. Thomas Hardy       
                        c. Rober Graves                  
                        d. Siegfried Sassoon
71.   Who said : “There is no difference between the language of poetry and that of prose except in metre”?
                        a.  Coleridge              
                        b. Wordsworth         
                        c. Arnold                           
                        d. Dryden
72.   “'Tis better to have loved and lost, / Than never to have loved at all” – Who said this?
                        a.  John Webster            
                        b. Lord Tennyson       
                        c. Robert Browning              
                        d. William Congreve
73.   Who coined the phrase “Egotistical Sublime”?
                        a.  William Wordsworth        
                        b. P.B. Shelley         
                        c. S.T. Coleridge           
                        d. John Keats
74.   Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otrando initiated a literary tradition called :
                        a.  Hunnish epic        
                        b. Gothic fiction           
                        c. Epistolary novel                  
                        d. Medieval romance
75.   What does the phrase “White Man’s Burden”, coined by Kipling, refer to?
a. Britain’s manifest destiny to colonise the world
b. the moral responsibility to bring civilization and Christianity to the people of the world
c.  the British need to improve technology and transportation in other parts of the world
d. the importance of solving economic and social problems in England before tackling the world’s problems
76.   What stanza form did Shelley use in his famous poem “Ode to the West Wind”?
                        a.  Rime Royal            
                        b. Ottava Rima                 
                        c. Terza Rima         
                        d. Spenserian Stanza
77.   Which of the following books was translated by John Keats?
                        a.  Aeneid               
                        b. Iliad                     
                        c. Odyssey                      
                        d. Vulgate
78.   The town mentioned in the poem “Lady of Shallot” by Tennyson is :
                        a. London        
                        b. York                    
                        c. Camelot                     
                        d. Oxford
79.   What is common among D.G. Rossetti, Christina Rossetti, William Morris and Swinburne?
a. They are all painters
b. They are all Victorian novelists
c. They all belong to the Pre-Raphaelite movement
d. They all belong to the Oxford movement
80.   Identify the poem which is NOT by Coleridge :
                        a.  Christabel              
                        b. Lucan               
                        c. The Ancient Mariner          
                        d. Kubla Khan
81.   Frankenstein is a/an :
                        a.  long poem by Shelley                          
                        b. play by John Dryden
                        c.  essay by Edmund Burke                       
                        d. novel by Mary Shelley
82.   The phrase “willing suspension of disbelief” occurs in :
                        a.  Biographia Literaria          
                        b. Preface to Lyrical Ballads     
                        c. In Defence of Poetry       
                        d. Poetics
83.   About which 19th century English writer was it said that “He had succeeded as a writer not by conforming to the spirit of the Age, but in opposition to it.” :
                        a.  Lord Byron on Coleridge                     
                        b. Coleridge on Keats
                        c.  Hazlit on Lamb                                   
                        d. Dequincey on Crabbe
84.   Lytton Stratchey’s Eminent Victorians is a/an :
                        a.  Novelette             
                        b. Long Poem           
                        c. Biography         
                        d. Autobiographical Novel
85.   Wordsworth in his Preface to Lyrical Ballads defines poet as a :
                        a.  Prophet of truth 
                        b. Seer                  
                        c. Reformer             
                        d. Man speaking to men
86.   The poem “The Lotos Eaters” is notable for its successful creation of the mood of :
                        a.  Apathy and inaction 
                        b. Jubilation          
                        c. Anger and bitterness        
                        d. Hope
87.   “Oh! Lift me as a wave, a leaf, a cloud! I fall upon the thorns of life! I bleed!” These lines are taken from :
                        a.  Ode to the West Wind  
                        b. Ode on a Grecian Urn       
                        c. To a Sky lark        
                        d. Ode to the Nightingale
88.   The sub-title of Middle March is :
                        a. A study in Rural Life                             
                        b. A study in Foreign Life
                        c.  A study of Social Life                              
                        d. A study in Provincial Life
89.   Jane Austen’s Emma was published in the year :
                        a.  1810                    
                        b. 1820             
                        c. 1815                        
                        d. 1825
90.   Keats in the “Ode on a Grecian Urn” closely examines the :
                        a.  Relationship between man and God                    
                        b. Issue of Human follies
                        c.  Issues related to socio-political order                       
                        d. State of changelessness and permanence
91.   In which poem of Wordsworth does the following line occur: “ Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive :
                        a.  “The Prelude”              
                        b. “Daffodils”       
                        c. “A Morning Exercise”        
                        d. “Upon Westminister Bridge”
92.   Which of the following is NOT a work by Wordsworth?
                        a.  The Prelude           
                        b. The Recluse                
                        c. Hyperion           
                        d. The Excusion  
93.   Shelley’s, ‘Adonais’ is an elegy on the death of :
                        a.  Milton                     
                        b. Coleridge                  
                        c. Keats                
                        d. Johnson
94.   Identify the poem by Swinburne which begins: “When the hounds of spring are on winter’s traces ………….
                        a.  A Song of Italy      
                        b. Songs before Sunrise      
                        c. Atlanta in Calydon         
                        d. Chasteland
95.   The term “Pre-Raphaelite” originated in :
                        a.  Italy              
                        b. Rome                        
                        c. France                
                        d. England
96.   Which statement is NOT true about the Victorian Age?
a. It was an age of intellectual development
b. It adhered to ludicrous notions of morality
c.  It expounded the philosophy of utilitarianism
d. It gave utmost importance to women’s empowerment
97.   Which of the following novels was written by Charlotte Bronte?
                        a.  Mill on the Floss           
                        b. Middle March              
                        c. Wuthering Heights        
                        d. Villette
98.   Who is commonly known as ‘Pip’ in Great Expectations?
                        a.  Philip Pirrip              
                        b. Filip Pirip                    
                        c. Philip pip            
                        d. Philips pirip
99.   George Eliot’s Silas Marner is a ………. Cloth-weaver.
                        a.  Methodist                
                        b. Catholic                     
                        c. Puritan              
                        d. Calvinist
100.     Who wrote under the name Teufelsdrockh?
               a.  John Ruskin          
               b. G.K. Chesterton           
               c. Thomas Carlyle        
               d. J.B. Priestley
101.     How many ballads were there in Percy’s Reliques?
               a.  102                      
               b. 80                      
               c. 128                    
               d. 180
102.     Which one of the following is the correct structure of a classical ode?
               a.  The strope, The antistrophe and the epode                  
               b. The epode, The strophe and the antistrophe
               c.  The strophe, The epode and The antistrophe        
               d. The antistrophe, The Strophe and The epode
103.     Which of the following is a work of Samuel Coleridge?
               a.  Essay on Faith        
               b. Sibylline Leaves             
               c. Hush                     
               d. All of them
104.     Match the following works with the author :
                 i.          I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud                                            -              (a) William Wordsworth
                ii.          Love                                                                                        -              (b) Lord Byron
               iii.          Mazeppa                                                                                -              (c) Samuel Taylor Coleridge
               iv.          The Triumph of Life                                                              -              (d) Percy Bysshe Shelley
                  a.  (i)-d, (ii)-b, (iii)-a, (iv)-c              
                  b. (i)-c, (ii)-a, (iii)-b, (iv)-d         
                  c. (i)-a, (ii)-c, (iii)-b, (iv)-d
                  d. (i)-d, (ii)-a, (iii)-b, (iv)-c
105.     Who is considered as the father of Gothic Fiction?
               a.  Horace Walpole        
               b. Walter Scott                   
               c. Mary Shelley         
               d. Leigh Hunt
106.     Who wrote the children book 'Tales from Shakespeare'?
               a.  Dequincy             
               b. Lamb                         
               c. J.S. Mill               
               d. Hazlitt
107.     Match the following works with their authors :
                 i.          Tales of my Landlord                                             -              (a) William Hazlitt
                ii.          Juvenilia                                                                 -              (b) Charles Lamb
               iii.          The Old Familiar Faces                                          -              (c) Walter Scott
               iv.          Characters of Shakespear’s Plays                       -              (d) Jane Austen
                  a.  (i)-b, (ii)-c, (iii)-d, (iv)-a                  
                  b. (i)-d, (ii)-a, (iii)-b, (iv)-c         
                  c. (i)-c, (ii)-d, (iii)-b, (iv)-a
                  d. (i)-a, (ii)-c, (iii)-d, (iv)-b
108.     “Malachi Malagrowther” is a pseudonym used by which among the following writer?
               a.  Walter Scott            
               b. Charles Lamb             
               c. J.S. Mill               
               d. Jane Austen
109.     Atalanta in Calydon is a work of :
               a.  Alfred Tennyson 
               b. D.G. Rossetti               
               c. A.C. Swinburne        
               d. Robert Browning
110.     "Art is functional" and that "in black Africa, 'art for art's sake' does not exist." - Whose opinion is this?
               a.  Leopold Senghor        
               b. Chinua Achebe             
               c. George Sand         
               d. Walter Benjamin
111.     "The history of the world is but the biography of great men.” – Whose opinion is this?
               a.  George Eliot         
               b. George Meredith              
               c. R.L. Stevenson           
               d. Thomas Carlyle
112.     Which among the following is a work of Thomas Carlyle?
               a.  Past and Present        
               b. Latter-Day Pamphlets 
               c. Frederick the Great    
               d. All of them
113.     Who among the following is NOT a part of the Oxford Movement?
               a.  John Keble           
               b. John Ruskin          
               c. Cardinal Newman           
               d. Hurrell Froude
114.     Which among the following periodical is associated with John Henry Newman?
               a.  The Spectator         
               b. The Germ             
               c. The Rambler                  
               d. The Tatler
115.     Who among the following wrote the biography Queen Victoria?
               a.  Lytton Strachey        
               b. John Ruskin          
               c. Leslie Stephen               
               d. Walter Pater
116.     'Jane Eyre' is written by :
               a. Charlotte Bronte    
               b. Emily Bronte        
               c. Anne Bronte         
               d. Anne Isabella Thackeray
117.     Callista is a novel written by :
               a.  Cardinal Newman       
               b. John Ruskin         
               c. Leslie Stephen                  
               d. Walter Pater
118.     Poems of 1912-1913 are an elegiac sequence written by :
               a.  Thomas Hardy          
               b. Rudyard Kipling              
               c. W.H. Auden          
               d. Stephen Spender
119.     Match the following Hardy’s novels with their alternative titles?
                      i.     Tess of the d’Urbervilles                                       ­-              (a) The Life and Death of a Man of Character
                     ii.     The Mayor of Casterbridge                                   -              (b) A Comedy in Chapters
                    iii.     The Well Beloved                                                -              (c) A Pure Woman Faithfully Presented
                    iv.     The Hand of Ethelberta                                         -              (d) A Sketch of a Temperament
                  a.  (i)–b, (ii)–c, (iii)–d, (iv)–a           
                  b. (i)–d, (ii)–a, (iii)–b, (iv)–c      
                  c. (i)–a, (ii)–d, (iii)–b, (iv)-c
                  d. (i)–c, (ii)–a, (iii)–d, (iv)–b
120.     Middlemarch’ is a realistic novel by :
               a. George Eliot    
               b. Emily Bronte        
               c. Anne Bronte         
               d. Anne Isabella Thackeray
              

1 comment:

  1. 1. B
    2. C
    3. A
    4. D
    5. D
    6. D
    7. C
    8. D
    9. A
    10. D
    11. B
    12. C
    13. D
    14. A
    15. A
    16. A
    17. A
    18. A
    19. B
    20. D
    21. B
    22. B
    23. C
    24. B
    25. C
    26. D
    27. C
    28. C
    29. B
    30. A
    31. A
    32. B
    33. C
    34. A
    35. C
    36. A
    37. B
    38. D
    39. B
    40. A
    41. D
    42. B
    43. A
    44. A
    45. A
    46. B
    47. B
    48. B
    49. B
    50. D
    51. B
    52. C
    53. B
    54. C
    55. A
    56. B
    57. D
    58. D
    59. C
    60. B
    61. B
    62. B
    63. C
    64. C
    65. B
    66. C
    67. C
    68. B
    69. B
    70. A
    71. B
    72. B
    73. D
    74. B
    75. B
    76. C
    77. A
    78. C
    79. C
    80. B
    81. D
    82. A
    83. C
    84. C
    85. D
    86. A
    87. A
    88. D
    89. C
    90. D
    91. A
    92. C
    93. C
    94. C
    95. D
    96. D
    97. D
    98. A
    99. A
    100. C
    101. D
    102. A
    103. D
    104. C
    105. A
    106. B
    107. C
    108. A
    109. C
    110. A
    111. D
    112. D
    113. B
    114. C
    115. A
    116. A
    117. A
    118. A
    119. D
    120. A

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