Final exam
Terms
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- though this be madness yet there is method in't
- polonius
- what famous composer set cecilias day to music
- hondle
- who knoew inferior french and was very concerned with manners and treated animals with great care
- prioress
- what three objects does the speaker wish to be in ode to the west wind
- leaves clouds waves
- the restoration in england began in 1660 with the crowning of whom as king
- charles II
- where the characters are virtues or symbols like knowlege or beauty or everyman
- naive allegory
- what play did pepys see that he thought the worst that ever he had seen
- romeo and juliet
- how does the speaker explain humanity's relationship to the lamb
- we are all called by his name
- which pilgrim had yellow hair bulging eyes no beard and a weak voice
- summoner
- in when i have fears what does the speaker invision himself doing
- standing on the shore
- what month did the travelers begin their pilgrimage to canterbery
- april
- what is the theme of marvell's to his coy mistress
- carpe diem
- who was a small tenant former who lived in perfect peace and charity
- plowman
- what is the dwelling place of thoughts in she walkes in beauty
- the face
- the renaissance devotion to the greek and latin classics has come to be known as
- humanism
- a long story often told in verse involving heroes or gods ex paradise lost
- epic
- according to the world is too much with us wordsworth believed man wasted his power by seeking what
- getting and spending
- what is the speakers key to happiness in sonnet 29
- love
- who was a food purchaser for a dormitory of law students he was quite shrewd
- manciple
- what did wordsworth and coleridge co-author
- lyrical ballads
- what is a line or group of lines repeated in a poem or song called
- refrain
- what are the two parts to the protestant interregnum
- protectrit and common wealth
- pope believed that one would practice restraint and moderation by avoiding what
- extremes
- what has kept the men of the village frm being a hampden or milton or cromwell
- money and education
- which pilgrim stayed out most of the night had curly hair and nice clothes
- squire
- a story that itself provides a vehicle for the telling of other stories
- frame tale
- what threatens true liberty
- idk
- why does the knight go to battle
- for his won honor and for gloriana
- the french revelution and the american revolution were two major political revolutions during what era
- romantic
- a contradictory statement, idea,or event
- paradox
- who was the famous french philosopher who celebrated the noble savage and held that governments derive power only from the consent of the governed, what he called the social contract
- jean jaques
- which pilgrim was an outdoorsman he loved to hunt eat and wear fine clothes
- monk
- what were the long-haired dandyish supporters of the ding called during the civil war
- cavaliers
- what were the two major political revolutions during the romantic era
- american and french
- what are the myths from a creed outworn to which the speaker refers to in the world is too much with us
- the sea gods triton and proteus
- what are the narrow cells that gray fefers to
- graves
- in everyman what decision does God make about humans
- they should have a reconing
- what was the symbol the knight wore on his chest
- red cross
- what is the difference between appearence and relity
- irony
- sonnet on chillon is an apostrophe to what
- liberty
- in auld lang syne what are the things the speaker remembers doing with his friend
- paddled in a stream picked daisies climed hills
- a breif story or anectode commmon in the middle ages told to illustrate an idea or moral
- exemplum
- you cannot sir take from me anything that i will more willingly part withal except my life except my life, except my life
- hamlet talking to polonious
- in sonnet 29 who is the speaker in disgrace
- men and fortune
- this pilgrim knew the taverns and the barmaids his name was hubert
- friar
- what famos work was writen by daniel defoe
- robinson and cruso
- whay are these that Gray celebrates far form the madding crowd
- bc they are not evil and have character
- this pilgrim had a wart on his nose from which bristly red hairs protruded he also played the bagpipes
- miller
- what two social institutions are mentioned in london
- church and government
- what legendary figure who played the lyre so that animals were tamed was alluded to in a song for cecilia
- orphios
- who is the speaker's dear dear friend in tintern abbey
- dorathy
- how wold you describe the character ofthe sheperd
- smooth talker romantic
- this pilgrim was poor in worldly goods but rich in holy thoughts and words he was a perfect example
- parson
- what is a short saying or pointed statement
- aphorism
- this pilgrim transacted business in a stately manner very few knew that he was deeply in debt
- merchant
- madness in great ones must not unwatch'd go
- claudius
- byran shelley keets
- second generation poets
- what does the shepherd promice the nymph in the first stanza
- pleasures of living in nature
- poem printed or written in a shape that suggests its subject matter
- concrete poem
- what vision does the speaker recall in kubla khan so that he wold be inspired to rebuild the pleasure dome
- a damsel playing the dulcimer
- in kubla khan it seems that this pleasure dome spoken of in this poem could be considered symbolic for what
- paradise/the garden of eden
- tis now the very witching time of night, when churchyards yan and hell itself breathes out contagion to this world
- hamlet
- who were the tow main metaphysical poets of the early siventeenth century
- herbert and donne
- why do you think shelley chose to use the wind as the central image in this poem
- inspiration and cycle of life
- what in popes view is usually true of wordy writing
- be redone
- what two great tragedies are mentioned in the last part of the poem
- baby born blind newlywed dies
- according to byron the speaker of the poem what is truly important in life according to stanzas written on the road between florence and pisa
- youth and love
- both wordsworth and coleridge would believe that true contentment could only come in one's life if that person was in tune with what
- nature
- who became the queen after the d3eaths of william and mary
- anne
- what does it mean to be periwig-pated
- to wear a wig
- who wrote waverly and ivanhoe
- scott
- brief story told told to teach a moral lesson
- idk
- what was the major literary form during the romantic era
- poetry
- according to a song for st cecilia's day what was the source of this universal frame
- heavenly harmony
- name the secont generation romantic era poets
- byran shelley keets
- what writer is known for his mock epics and critical essays
- dryden
- to the sailos the albatross was a sign of what
- life and safety
- who is known for his dictionary of the english language and his periodical the rambler
- johnson
- what factors contributed to making the fire especially destructive
- wind and drought
- what are paired lines of rhymed iambic pentameter
- hyroic couplet
- how did wordswoth define poetry
- spontanious overflow of powerful feelings
- a humorous writing or speech intended to point out errors falshoods foibes or failings
- satire
- everyman is an example of what type of medieval drama in which the characters are abstract caricatures of virtues vices and the like
- moral
- that great baby you see there is not yet out of his swaddling-clouts
- hamlet referring to hamlet
- what is a long formal poem about death or loss
- elegy
- what is an inscription or verse written to be used on a tomb or written commemoration of someone who has died
- epitaph
- i must be cruel only to be kind
- hamlet
- how does the speaker suggest dialing with the sweft passge of time in to his coy mistress
- take it by the throat
- which pilgrim has a fire-red complextion pimples and boils and scaly infection around the eyebrow and a moth-eaten eard
- pardoner
- according to the speaker what have some people called death
- mighty and dreadful
- who wrote the first great modern english biography
- boswell
- what according to the speaker in cecilias day begins and ends with music
- world
- the romantics were rebelling against the rational orderly forms of what previous movement
- neoclasticism
- do not forget this visitation is but to whet your almost blunted purpose
- ghost king
- what did the speaker gain form heaven accourding to gray
- a friend
- according to tintern abbey how long has it been since the speaker was in this place
- five yrs
- poking fun with a purpose
- satire
- what is the name of the host from the tabard inn
- harry bailey
- what types of emotions are evoked by the landscape around tintern abbey for the speaker
- peaceful emotions
- major strides were made duing the romantic era in the development of two forms of prose
- novel and essay
- wordsworth's principal objective in his writing was to write in what type of language
- common language
- where is kubla khan's pleasure dome
- xanadu
- what litarary term is used to describe something not human
- aphostrophe
- writers who rediscovered the classic works of the ancient greeks and romans and emulated them were known as what
- neoclastisists
- what is a chopine
- shoe
- the lady doth protest too much methinks
- gertrude
- with the approval of his uncle, young fortinbras has now decided to invade
- poland
- what litarary medium was also restored during the restoration
- drama
- what feelings does the speaker attribute to the moon
- saddness
- according to the poem the wold is too much with us people are out of tune with what in general
- nature
- how would you characterize the romantic movement
- nature emotion common language
- what type of novels or ramances are long stories containing elements of suspense mystery magic and the macabre with exotic settings such as haunted castles and untamed wildernesses
- gothic novels
- who wrote the best historical romance novels of the romantic era
- scott
- what does the speaker say about the paths of glory
- lead to the grave
- charles I was in constant need for money for the war with spain this put him in a constang struggle with what govenmental group
- parliment
- which pilgrim seemed to be into astrology he made a lot of money during the plague he loved gold
- doctor
- what might you say about the relationship between the two people in anderson my jo
- married
- how does the speaker feel is worthless ad bad and stuckup
- ambition and grandeur
- what instrument was a call to action in song for st cecilia
- drums
- who is gildrig
- gulliver
- to what process involving furnaces and anvils does the speaker compare the creation of the tiger
- blacksmith hell
- this pilgrim was epicurus' son he had a great sock of wine a bountiful feast at his house he was a sheriff
- franklin
- what was the rumor about how the fire had started
- the french
- what does polonius ask reynaldo to do
- spy on laertes
- to what original ordering of things does the speaker compare that most orderly of art forms and usic in a song for st cecilia
- creation
- haberdasher dyer carpenter weaver carpet maker
- the guild
- what is personified in gray's work as complaining to the moon
- idk
- what literary device did wordsworth and coleridge reject because they found it to be unnatural and ludicrous
- personification
- who wrote the periodicals the tattler and the spectator
- steele and addison
- what is written on the gravestones
- name date scriptures
- what men let the forces that defeatid the royalists in 1646
- cromwell
- to whom does the speaker compare the lamb
- lamb of God
- in london in what ways are the people of the city manacled
- the closemindedness and fear of their minds
- what kind of literary work contains highly unrealistic elements
- fantasy