English Final
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- Stage manager plays this at the wedding
- Minister
- Joe Starks
- Janies second husband; mayor of Eatonville
- What do Georges George's parents think this of the wedding
- They are too young
- Mr. Wolfsheim
- Gambler; fixed the 1919 World Series; has a cufflink of molars; lives in Gatsby's house
- somewhere i have never traveled gladly beyond"
- E.E. Cummings
- East Egg
- Old Money
- Henry C Gatz
- Gatsby's Dad
- Both the Webb and Gibbs houses are two story houses.
- True
- Setting
- in 1924-1925; Long Island New York
- Rebecca
- younger sister of George
- Mr. Webb
- Emily's father
- Janie never knew her mother and father.
- True
- Joe Crowell
- town paperboy who will die in the war in France
- Act 1
- Daily Life
- Owl Eyes
- Drunk man who Nick meets at at Gatsby's party; says the books are real' only one to attend Gatsby's funeral
- Annie Tyler
- All money taken by who her husband
- Pheoby grows an amazing 10 feet after hearing Janie's story.
- False
- Their Eyes Were Watching God was written during the English Renaissance.
- False
- George gives up baseball to get married to Emily.
- True
- Act III is set....
- in the cemetary
- Their Eyes Were Watching God is considered a "frame story."
- True
- "The Starry Night"
- Anna Sexton
- Valley of ashes
- death; a dumping ground
- Janie
- Narrator
- "We Wear the Mask"
- Paul Lawrence Dunbar
- Joe Starks served as mayor, postmaster, landlord, and storekeeper in Eatonville.
- True
- Logan Killicks
- First husband(arranged by marriage)
- George's goal in life is to be a professional baseball player.
- False
- The Lost Generation
- Post war writers that left a sense of dislocation and alienation. They felt the real America had been lost or dostorted.
- Modernism
- was an artistic and literary movement of the early 20th century that championed experimentation, technicality, primitivism, impersonalism, aestheticism, and intellectualism
- Actors demonstrate props by
- pantomime
- "The Negro Speaks of Rivers"
- Langston Hughes
- The novel begins with Janie returning to the house she shared with Logan Killicks.
- False
- Jordan
- Daisy's friend; a golfer; eventually falls in love with Nick; cynical; boyish. self centered; dishonest; she cheated in order to win her first golf tournament and continually bends the truth
- Janie believed Logan Killicks was not meant to be loved.
- True
- "The Slump"
- John Updike
- Tom
- Daisy's husband; wealthy and lives in East Egg: once was a member of the Yale's social club with Nick; arrogant and hypocritical; has affair with Myrtle; sturdy. straw haired man of 30
- grandmother wanted her to marry for protection rather than love.
- True
- The Everglades
- South Florida; on the muck:hurricane
- Act 3
- Death
- "Yet Do I Marvel"
- Countee Cullen
- Myrtle Wilson
- George's wife; Tom's mistress; Broke her nose by Tom; plump; killed by Toms car driven by Daisy
- After dying, Simon had a much brighter outlook on life.
- False
- Dr. Gibbs
- George's father
- Mrs. Soames
- considered the town gossip
- Act 2
- Love and Marraige
- Stage Manager
- omniscient narrator of the play
- Howie Newsome
- town's milkman
- Daisy
- Nick's second cousin and Tom's wife; the woman Gatsby loves; from Louisville where she met Gatsby; was supposed to wait for Gatsby but instead married Tom; lives in East Egg; drove the car the hit and killed Myrtle; in love with money
- George Wilson
- Myrtle's husband; owns an auto repair garage; loves and idealizes Myrtle
- "Green Light"
- Gatsby's feeling towards Daisy;the closeness of Daisy though she is far away
- Simon Stimson dies
- suicide
- Year of first act
- 1901
- Janie left Logan Killicks for a man named Tea Cake Woods.
- False
- Does NOT give background information of the town to the audience
- Dr. Gibbs
- Mrs. Gibbs
- George's mother
- The Stage Manager plays the role of Mr. Morgan.
- True
- "The Richer the Poorer"
- Dorthy West
- "How it Feels to be Colored Me"
- Zora Hurston
- Play's setting
- New Hampshire...Grovers Corner
- Eatonville, Florida
- Joe starks is major.
- "This is Just to Say"
- William Carlos Williams
- Imagist
- Poem; a lyric peom that presents a single vivid picture in words
- "Grass"
- Carl Sandburg
- Gatsby's shirts
- to show Daisy that he can take care of her; wealth
- "Morning Song"
- Sylvia Path
- : At the beginning of the novel Janie is criticized for wearing the same blue-satin dress she had left in years before.
- False
- Eatonville was named after Captain Eaton who owned he land.
- True
- Clock Gatsby knocks over
- akwardness, nervousness
- "Constantly Risking Absurdity"
- Lawrence Ferlinghetti
- Emily flashback to when "knew they were meant for one another
- George
- Colors silver and gold
- wealth
- Tea Cake Woods
- Janies 3rd husband; work in the everglades
- Janie loved everything about being Mrs. Mayor.
- False
- Emily's cousin, who comes from out of town for the funeral, is named Joe Stoddard.
- False
- When George moves out, George's mother is concerned
- he will get sick
- moves to Jacksonville to being a new life as a single and independent woman.
- False
- Gatsby's car
- Wealth
- Emily
- very intelligent girl who wants to make speeches all her life
- "Home Burial"
- Robert Frost
- The main topic of conversation on the porch of the Eatonville store was Matt Bonner's mule.
- True
- Mending Wall"
- Robert Frost
- Wally dies of
- burst appendix
- Act II takes
- Emily and George's wedding
- Pheoby
- Janie's best friend in Eatonville
- "Those Winter Sundays"
- Robert Hayden
- Editor of the town paper
- Mr. Webb
- Nanny
- Janies grandmother; arranged marriage for janies Protection
- Emily dies
- giving birth
- Prof. Willard
- gives details of the town's history
- Songs
- upbeat and fit to the themes of the chapters
- George
- star baseball player with a career goal of being a farmer
- Kilpspringer
- "the boarder"; came to Gatsby's party; helped gatsby gain his fortune
- At the start of the play, George & Emily are in high school.
- True
- Emily wishes to relive
- her 12th birthday
- Nick
- Narrator; young man from Minnesota; educated in Yale; faught in WW1 in the Ninth Machine-Gun Battalion of the Third Division: came to New York to learn the bond buisness; next door neighbor to Gatsby;Is tolerant, openminded, quiet, and a good listener; falls in love with Jordan Baker
- Mrs. Gibbs dies of
- pneumonia
- "Any Human to Another"
- Countee Cullen
- Mrs. Webb
- Emily's mother
- Emily's goal in life was to get married.
- False
- Jacksonville, Florida
- Janie and Tea Cake get married here
- : In Act II, the job of paperboy had been taken over by Si Crowell.
- True
- Wolfsheim's cuff links
- wealth; money is repulsive
- Gatsby
- Protagonist; walthy young man living in West Egg(new money): famous for the lavish parties he holds every saturday: fought in WW1 in the seventh Infantry of the Third Division; attend Oxford for 5 months; in love with Daisy Buchanan
- James Gatz
- Gatsby's real name; from North Dakota and was really not rich
- Stream of Conciousness
- writing that attempts to render the flow of feelings, throughts, and impressions, within the minds of characters
- At the start of the play Dr. Gibbs in coming home from delivering twins.
- True
- Dr. T.J's Eyes
- Eyes of God; overlook everything that happend
- Dan Cody
- Taught Gatsby about money and let him inherit his money that he never got.
- Simon Stimson
- town is concerned about this character's drinking problem
- "The Love Story of J. Alfred Prufrock"
- TS Elliot
- West Egg
- New Money
- Syntax
- The pattern of arrangement of words in a statement. Poets often vary the syntax of ordinary speech or experiment with usual syntactic arrangements
- Zora Neale Hurston grew up in Eatonville, Florida.
- True
- Timetable
- was in the book that Mr. Gatz showed; how hardworking Gatsby was to achieve wealth
- "I, too, Sing America"
- Langston Hughes
- Wally
- Emily's brother
- "The Red Wheelbarrow"
- William Carlos Williams
- Joe Stoddard
- town's undertaker