Option A: It is a dramatic monologue.
Option B: Like earlier Romantic lyrics, it takes a natural setting as an occasion for philosophical reflection.
Option C: It has a melancholic tone.
Option D: It envisions Christianity as eternal.
Correct Answer: It envisions Christianity as eternal. ✔
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Option A: Their conservative poetics
Option B: Their frank depiction of sexuality
Option C: Their radical politics
Option D: Their nationalistic tone
Correct Answer: Their frank depiction of sexuality ✔
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Option A: his use of the heroic couplet.
Option B: an Enlightenment focus on useful knowledge.
Option C: a neoclassical emphasis on propriety and knowing limitations.
Option D: a radical questioning of revealed religion
Correct Answer: a radical questioning of revealed religion ✔
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Option A: Women should wear more makeup in order to attract husbands.
Option B: Women should make sure to receive an education in order to secure their own futures.
Option C: Women should take pains to remain generous, modest, and capable.
Option D: Women should be given the right to vote immediately.
Correct Answer: Women should take pains to remain generous, modest, and capable. ✔
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Option A: More magazines on the market
Option B: The rise in serialized fiction
Option C: Lower prices for magazines
Option D: The passage of the Reform Bills
Correct Answer: The passage of the Reform Bills ✔
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Option A: Checks and balances
Option B: Social contract
Option C: Enlightened monarchy
Option D: Socialism
Correct Answer: Socialism ✔
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Option A: The poet’s changing relationship to nature as fount of meaning and significance
Option B: The falsity of human art as opposed to the immediate truth of nature
Option C: The failure of the poet when a youth to imagine his future
Option D: The utter rejection of youthful folly in favor of mature rationality
Correct Answer: The poet’s changing relationship to nature as fount of meaning and significance ✔
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Option A: Darwin’s work echoed Victorian thought with its emphasis on struggle while disrupting Victorian faith by decentering humans.
Option B: Darwin’s work was almost universally accepted from its first appearance.
Option C: Darwin’s work had little initial influence on Victorian society and culture.
Option D: Almost all religious authorities rejected Darwin’s work completely.
Correct Answer: Darwin’s work echoed Victorian thought with its emphasis on struggle while disrupting Victorian faith by decentering humans. ✔
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Option A: Ideas about chastity
Option B: The institution of marriage
Option C: The aristocracy
Option D: All of these answers
Correct Answer: All of these answers ✔
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Option A: The common man
Option B: The promises of technology
Option C: The outcast figure
Option D: The movement of time
Correct Answer: The promises of technology ✔
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Option A: An identical rhyme structure
Option B: The belief that a person is incapable of change, even as he or she ages
Option C: The sense of hope that death will come soon
Option D: A shared theme that nature exposes the pain in human life
Correct Answer: A shared theme that nature exposes the pain in human life ✔
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Option A: rejection of Renaissance optimism.
Option B: rejection of traditional models.
Option C: emphasis on order, logic, and universal truths.
Option D: emphasis on the corrupt nature of the aristocracy.
Correct Answer: emphasis on order, logic, and universal truths. ✔
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Option A: It reiterates the class divisions that kept both men and women from social mobility.
Option B: It suggests that women were increasingly accepted as professionals.
Option C: It indicates that British society had become much more egalitarian.
Option D: It reveals the stern consequences of the Industrial Revolution.
Correct Answer: It reiterates the class divisions that kept both men and women from social mobility. ✔
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Option A: folklore.
Option B: nationalism.
Option C: parody.
Option D: exoticism
Correct Answer: parody. ✔
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Option A: They enabled discussion about important literary texts.
Option B: They created a space for the exchange of pamphlets.
Option C: They offered people a private place in which they could plan political revolts.
Option D: Both A and B
Correct Answer: Both A and B ✔
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Option A: Familiar essays
Option B: Comedies of manners
Option C: Romanticism
Option D: Medievalism
Correct Answer: Comedies of manners ✔
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Option A: its mocking tone.
Option B: its absurd response to a real issue.
Option C: its sentimental plea to its audience.
Option D: its attempt to shock readers into acting.
Correct Answer: its sentimental plea to its audience. ✔
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Option A: His Promethean striving to exceed human limitations as explored by Byron and Percy Shelley
Option B: Its suggestion that the natural order has laws beyond human control
Option C: His desire to create a political revolution
Option D: Both A and B
Correct Answer: Both A and B ✔
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Option A: it thematizes the importance of choosing action over complacency.
Option B: it reflects a Victorian attitude of continuing to fight against loss of hope or faith.
Option C: it uses Greek mythology to comment on contemporary questions.
Option D: it emphasizes the internal life of the mind over social action.
Correct Answer: it emphasizes the internal life of the mind over social action. ✔
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Option A: Ann Radcliffe
Option B: William Wordsworth
Option C: John Keats
Option D: Alfred Lord Tennyson
Correct Answer: William Wordsworth ✔
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Option A: scientific emphasis on detailed observation.
Option B: the political focus on individuals and their rights.
Option C: philosophical theories of sympathy and human emotions.
Option D: the continuing importance of mythological stories.
Correct Answer: the continuing importance of mythological stories. ✔
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Option A: devotion to traditional authority in political and theoretical matters.
Option B: emphasis on the world being governed by laws that could be discerned through rational exploration.
Option C: reliance on classical scholarship.
Option D: defense of violent emotions as natural.
Correct Answer: emphasis on the world being governed by laws that could be discerned through rational exploration. ✔
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Option A: William Congreve
Option B: Ann Radcliffe
Option C: Matthew Lewis
Option D: Charles Dickens
Correct Answer: Charles Dickens ✔
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Option A: Immanuel Kant
Option B: John Locke
Option C: David Hume
Option D: Denis Diderot
Correct Answer: Immanuel Kant ✔
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Option A: Romanticism continued the Enlightenment’s focus on a universal order best apprehended through reason.
Option B: Romanticism challenged the Enlightenment’s emphasis on objectivity as the basis of truth.
Option C: Romanticism largely abandoned the
Option D: Unlike the Enlightenment, Romanticism deemed the natural world unimportant
Correct Answer: Romanticism challenged the Enlightenment’s emphasis on objectivity as the basis of truth. ✔
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Option A: A return to neoclassical aesthetics
Option B: Disassociating painting and poetry
Option C: Lavish attention to the sensuous elements of life
Option D: Rejecting English poetic tradition
Correct Answer: Lavish attention to the sensuous elements of life ✔
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Option A: The effect of the sublime on the physical body
Option B: The distinction between the sublime and beauty
Option C: An aesthetic explanation of the sublime through painting
Option D: The important role surprise plays in creating pleasure
Correct Answer: The important role surprise plays in creating pleasure ✔
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Option A: Repeal of the corn laws
Option B: Opium Wars
Option C: Great Exhibition
Option D: French Revolution
Correct Answer: French Revolution ✔
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Option A: It emphasizes emotion over reason.
Option B: It has a didactic moral focus.
Option C: There is a focus on a central love story.
Option D: All of these answers
Correct Answer: All of these answers ✔
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Option A: England’s power to overcome the recent plague and the great fire of London
Option B: The monarch’s ability to squelch continuing Puritan resistance
Option C: The church’s potential to unify the populace after the English revolution
Option D: Parliament’s ability to restrain the power of the King
Correct Answer: England’s power to overcome the recent plague and the great fire of London ✔
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Option A: Its use of a medieval setting to reflect on rational progress
Option B: Its focus on having readers vicariously experience the dangers that a heroine faces
Option C: Its ambivalent treatment of its leading villain
Option D: Its use of the sublime
Correct Answer: Its focus on having readers vicariously experience the dangers that a heroine faces ✔
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Option A: It has a speaker as well as an implied reader.
Option B: It includes elements of parody.
Option C: There is a “spontaneous overflow of emotion.”
Option D: It is written in common, ordinary language.
Correct Answer: It has a speaker as well as an implied reader. ✔
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Option A: By dismissing all knowledge from outside Europe
Option B: By questioning the nature of scientific method
Option C: By rejecting the divine right of kings
Option D: By emphasizing the idea that gathering knowledge together can lead to human improvement
Correct Answer: By emphasizing the idea that gathering knowledge together can lead to human improvement ✔
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Option A: Sonnet 43 is similar to most other sonnets in its focus on love.
Option B: Sonnet 43 is part of a sonnet sequence “Sonnets from the Portuguese.”
Option C: Sonnet 43 consists of fourteen lines, like other sonnets.
Option D: Sonnet 43 is a romantic poem in the same way Wordsworth’s “Tintern Abbey” is a romantic poem.
Correct Answer: Sonnet 43 is a romantic poem in the same way Wordsworth’s “Tintern Abbey” is a romantic poem. ✔
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Option A: Literature that relies on devices like irony, sarcasm, and humor
Option B: A work of literature that attempts to improve society
Option C: A text that exposes serious flaws under the veil of comedy
Option D: All of these answers
Correct Answer: All of these answers ✔
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Option A: A period in the 18th century that celebrated industry
Option B: The revelation of religious truths through meditation
Option C: The power given to absolute monarchs by God
Option D: A period in which reason was celebrated as enabling human knowledge and possibly human perfection
Correct Answer: A period in which reason was celebrated as enabling human knowledge and possibly human perfection ✔
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Option A: its references to Shakespeare.
Option B: its commitment to an elevated taste, its use of classical imagery, and its evocation of classic forms.
Option C: its scientific ethos and setting in London.
Option D: its refusal to mention Shadwell directly.
Correct Answer: its commitment to an elevated taste, its use of classical imagery, and its evocation of classic forms. ✔
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Option A: They raised the question of whether women should be able to vote.
Option B: They allowed new colonization and imperialism efforts.
Option C: They established new standards for Victorian morality.
Option D: They allowed women to divorce their husbands.
Correct Answer: They raised the question of whether women should be able to vote. ✔
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Option A: rejection of traditional form.
Option B: portrayal of the power of art to speak truth.
Option C: rejection of art’s political role.
Option D: attempt to link poetry with music.
Correct Answer: portrayal of the power of art to speak truth. ✔
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Option A: A debate about whether women should be able to vote
Option B: A discussion of women’s roles inside and outside the home
Option C: A conversation about women’s work as a product of the Industrial Revolution
Option D: All of these answers
Correct Answer: All of these answers ✔
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Option A: Competition between European rivals forced the British to find new trading partners.
Option B: Colonizers were no longer necessarily interested in reforming indigenous populations.
Option C: People found ways to justify expansion by claiming national superiority.
Option D: All of these answers
Correct Answer: All of these answers ✔
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Option A: To help drive his ideas across the universe
Option B: To help him reach the afterlife
Option C: To help him hear nature’s music
Option D: To help him start a new revolutionary war
Correct Answer: To help drive his ideas across the universe ✔
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Option A: social contract theory of government.
Option B: blank slate or tabula rasa.
Option C: divine authority of kings.
Option D: natural political rights.
Correct Answer: divine authority of kings. ✔
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Option A: Their imperialist settings reflect the interest in faraway lands that led to adventure novels.
Option B: Both emphasize romantic relationships that play up the importance of women readers.
Option C: Both focus on the struggles of lower or middle-class characters, mirroring the development of a large middle-class readership as consumers.
Option D: Their epistolary forms reflect an increasing political interest in subjective feelings.
Correct Answer: Both focus on the struggles of lower or middle-class characters, mirroring the development of a large middle-class readership as consumers. ✔
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Option A: Congreve’s The Way of the World
Option B: Richardson’s Pamela
Option C: Radcliffe’s The Mysteries of Udolpho
Option D: Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto
Correct Answer: Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto ✔
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Option A: Alexander Pope
Option B: Percy Shelley
Option C: Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Option D: Alfred Tennyson
Correct Answer: Alfred Tennyson ✔
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Option A: Where Oroonoko foregrounds supernatural agents, Robinson Crusoe avoids religion completely.
Option B: Both are largely set in South America, reflecting the relationship between empire and the early English novel.
Option C: Oroonoko seems to defend the aristocracy, where Robinson Crusoe elaborates the struggles of the middle class.
Option D: Both make claims to historical veracity.
Correct Answer: Where Oroonoko foregrounds supernatural agents, Robinson Crusoe avoids religion completely. ✔
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Option A: The pressure of conforming to preexisting social conventions
Option B: The burden of white colonizers who are forced to learn to live in new lands
Option C: The Eurocentric idea that the colonizer has a social responsibility to civilize other nations
Option D: The concept that all white men do not share the same imperial duties
Correct Answer: The Eurocentric idea that the colonizer has a social responsibility to civilize other nations ✔
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Option A: The lyric poem is a popular form in the Romantic era.
Option B: The lyric poem has a song-like quality.
Option C: The lyric poem creates a personal sense of emotion.
Option D: The lyric poem focuses on action.
Correct Answer: The lyric poem focuses on action. ✔
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Option A: reason can help man understand beauty.
Option B: civilization comes through beauty.
Option C: language shows humanity’s impulse towards order.
Option D: poetry has no effect on society.
Correct Answer: poetry has no effect on society. ✔
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Option A: Pope’s The Rape of the Lock
Option B: Swift’s “A Modest Proposal”
Option C: Richardson’s Pamela
Option D: Lewis’s The Monk
Correct Answer: Richardson’s Pamela ✔
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Option A: It functions as a metaphor for the women’s rights movement.
Option B: It foreshadows a negative shift in mood.
Option C: It symbolizes the increase in scientific knowledge.
Option D: It acts as an allusion to the importance of nature in the Romantic period.
Correct Answer: It foreshadows a negative shift in mood. ✔
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Option A: traveled to America.
Option B: believed in God.
Option C: emphasized the importance of human emotions as guiding behavior.
Option D: rejected Newton’s view of the universe.
Correct Answer: emphasized the importance of human emotions as guiding behavior. ✔
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Option A: Like Great Expectations, Jane Eyre addresses the power of wealth and class.
Option B: Like “Dover Beach,” Jane Eyre mourns the diminishing power of Christian faith.
Option C: Through Rochester, Jane Eyre develops a Byronic hero.
Option D: Like Great Expectations, Jane Eyre can be read as a bildungsroman.
Correct Answer: Like “Dover Beach,” Jane Eyre mourns the diminishing power of Christian faith. ✔
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Complete the following sentence. The opening frame narrative of Frankenstein comes from__________?
Option A: Walton, a failed poet who is attempting to discover the North Pole.
Option B: the creature, after he has killed Victor Frankenstein.
Option C: Victor Frankenstein’s diary.
Option D: Mrs. Saville, Frankenstein’s cousin.
Correct Answer: Walton, a failed poet who is attempting to discover the North Pole. ✔
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Option A: like a romance, it focuses on an aristocratic character considered superior to average individuals.
Option B: like a novel, it tells its story with an emphasis on realistic detail and the everyday passage of time.
Option C: like an epic, it involves gods and goddesses.
Option D: like a novel, it makes claims to historical realism.
Correct Answer: like an epic, it involves gods and goddesses. ✔
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Option A: revealing his interest in Chaucer.
Option B: enabling his 18th-century readers access to a world they would see as less rational.
Option C: promoting the rise of museums.
Option D: commenting on the French and Indian War.
Correct Answer: enabling his 18th-century readers access to a world they would see as less rational. ✔
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Option A: Witty banter
Option B: Epic heroes
Option C: Sexual promiscuity
Option D: Hidden identities
Correct Answer: Witty banter ✔
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Option A: Wordsworth’s “We Are Seven”
Option B: Pope’s Rape of the Lock
Option C: Swift’s “A Modest Proposal”
Option D: Benn’s Oroonoko
Correct Answer: Pope’s Rape of the Lock ✔
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Option A: Like the novel, it focused on romantic relationships.
Option B: Like the novel, it foregrounded abstract reason over experience and emotion.
Option C: Like the novel, it emphasized the importance of sympathy and individual feelings.
Option D: Like the novel, it demonized the aristocracy.
Correct Answer: Like the novel, it emphasized the importance of sympathy and individual feelings. ✔
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Which of the following novelists was NOT associated with the rise of the novel as a literary form ?
Option A: Samuel Richardson
Option B: Laurence Sterne
Option C: Daniel Defoe
Option D: Charles Dickens
Correct Answer: Charles Dickens ✔
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Option A: Classification, order, and judgment
Option B: Romantic origins
Option C: Linguistic indeterminacy
Option D: Subjective experience
Correct Answer: Classification, order, and judgment ✔
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Radcliffe’s version of the Gothic differs most from Walpole’s in its use of which of the following ?
Option A: The sublime
Option B: The explained supernatural
Option C: Its medieval settings
Option D: Its use of mysterious events to spur readers’ interests and emotional responses
Correct Answer: The explained supernatural ✔
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Option A: The need for linguistic correctness as exemplified in his Dictionary
Option B: The promise of universal knowledge as epitomized by the Encyclopédie
Option C: The ultimate impossibility of achieving happiness, as espoused in his poem “The Vanity of Human Wishes”
Option D: The need for self-sufficiency as detailed in novels like Robinson Crusoe
Correct Answer: The ultimate impossibility of achieving happiness, as espoused in his poem “The Vanity of Human Wishes” ✔
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Option A: Industrial Revolution
Option B: French Revolution
Option C: Scientific Revolution
Option D: Technological Revolution
Correct Answer: French Revolution ✔
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Option A: It provides access to the heroine’s innermost reactions.
Option B: It does not cloud the novel with authorial intrusion that confuses the emotions.
Option C: It provides a sense of immediacy because the letters are written in the thick of the action.
Option D: All of these answers
Correct Answer: All of these answers ✔
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Option A: are an example of antithesis to suggest the falcon’s contradictory nature.
Option B: use alliterative language to draw attention to the falcon’s importance as a symbol of Christ.
Option C: refer to the speaker’s heart.
Option D: indicate the speaker’s lack of faith.
Correct Answer: use alliterative language to draw attention to the falcon’s importance as a symbol of Christ. ✔
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Option A: It focuses on a royal hero.
Option B: It denies being imagined in favor of claims of realism.
Option C: It focuses on adventures.
Option D: It connects to poetry.
Correct Answer: It denies being imagined in favor of claims of realism. ✔
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Option A: His relationship to God and Christianity
Option B: His understanding of the basis of economics
Option C: His ability to identify with the slaves he has sold
Option D: Both A and B
Correct Answer: Both A and B ✔
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Option A: its focus on his lost love.
Option B: its rejection of scientific progress.
Option C: its elaboration of the intersecting importance of nature and the imagination.
Option D: its development of elements from national folklore.
Correct Answer: its elaboration of the intersecting importance of nature and the imagination. ✔
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Option A: certain people are simply incapable of understanding poetry.
Option B: the true poet must be comfortable with balancing conflicting ideas.
Option C: the poet cannot express anything beyond his own experience.
Option D: it is only in the absence of experience that true poetry can emerge.
Correct Answer: the true poet must be comfortable with balancing conflicting ideas. ✔
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Option A: indicates her longing for the older aristocracy.
Option B: suggests her commitment to the Catholic Church.
Option C: is at odds with her explicit socialist politics.
Option D: implies that contemporary British society has overcome the institutions leading to the horrors its characters experience.
Correct Answer: implies that contemporary British society has overcome the institutions leading to the horrors its characters experience. ✔
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Option A: a radical break with 18th-century rules on elevated diction.
Option B: a continuity with poets such as Alexander Pope.
Option C: a rejection of nature in favor of society.
Option D: a defense of the use of elaborate figurative language.
Correct Answer: a radical break with 18th-century rules on elevated diction. ✔
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Option A: An emphasis on the relationship between a natural setting and the imagination as in Wordsworth’s poems
Option B: A focus on the poet as seer as in some of Keats’s poems
Option C: A call for social and political reform as in some of Shelley’s works
Option D: A nod to the poet as outcast as in some of Byron’s poems
Correct Answer: An emphasis on the relationship between a natural setting and the imagination as in Wordsworth’s poems ✔
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Option A: demonstrate the importance of the topic.
Option B: set up the parody of the pretensions of the characters and their concerns.
Option C: reveal the learnedness of the characters.
Option D: elicit the sympathy of elite readers
Correct Answer: set up the parody of the pretensions of the characters and their concerns. ✔
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Option A: Nature as mirroring the human mind and its imagination
Option B: The limits of scientific attempts to understand and control the world
Option C: The poet as special interpreter of the world
Option D: The centrality of subjective experience to apprehending the world
Correct Answer: The limits of scientific attempts to understand and control the world ✔
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Option A: There should be more missionary work in less civilized parts of the world.
Option B: Concerts in the parks that were attended by ordinary people should be banned.
Option C: Civil servants should talk more openly and publicly about their moral work.
Option D: Members of the Jewish and Catholic faiths should be excluded from public office.
Correct Answer: There should be more missionary work in less civilized parts of the world. ✔
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Option A: He thought it did not go far enough in granting women rights.
Option B: He opposed it in favor of supporting the king and the ancien régime.
Option C: He favored its democratic impulses but was appalled by its destructive nature.
Option D: He did not think it concerned him and his relationship to nature.
Correct Answer: He favored its democratic impulses but was appalled by its destructive nature. ✔
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Option A: Pamela’s attempt to seduce her employer
Option B: Pamela’s parents’ attempt to marry her to a wealthy landowner
Option C: Pamela’s struggle to overcome her poverty through hard-work
Option D: Pamela’s attempts to protect her chastity from the advances of her employer
Correct Answer: Pamela’s attempts to protect her chastity from the advances of her employer ✔
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Option A: They are somewhat jaded, but all are finally good at heart.
Option B: They are almost universally selfabsorbed and willing to do anything to get what they want.
Option C: They tend to value love above money and honor.
Option D: They provide a moral example for the lower classes.
Correct Answer: They are almost universally selfabsorbed and willing to do anything to get what they want. ✔
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Which of the following statements accurately describes the theme of Wordsworth’s “Tintern Abbey” ?
Option A: Nature loses its ability to affect human emotion over time.
Option B: Sensitivity to nature’s message comes with age.
Option C: Life experience does not have to power to alter human opinions.
Option D: It is not possible to appreciate beauty once one has aged.
Correct Answer: Sensitivity to nature’s message comes with age. ✔
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Option A: Reason over emotions
Option B: The necessity for an aristocracy
Option C: The power of feelings
Option D: A sense of adventure
Correct Answer: The power of feelings ✔
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Option A: The Protestant Reformation
Option B: Religious interpretations of changes to the oceans
Option C: The decline of religion’s importance in the modern West
Option D: His lover’s betrayal
Correct Answer: The decline of religion’s importance in the modern West ✔
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Option A: his brothers died in their youth.
Option B: he was endowed with a great poetic talent.
Option C: he was given special educational opportunities.
Option D: he feels especially connected to nature due to his experience as a youth.
Correct Answer: he feels especially connected to nature due to his experience as a youth. ✔
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Option A: Penal reform
Option B: Educational reform
Option C: The role of the monarchy
Option D: Both A and B
Correct Answer: Both A and B ✔
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Option A: The government
Option B: Marriage
Option C: Organized religion
Option D: All of these answers
Correct Answer: All of these answers ✔
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Option A: Nonfiction
Option B: Travel memoir
Option C: Detective story
Option D: Biography
Correct Answer: Detective story ✔
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Option A: The dangers of sensuality to women
Option B: The links between sexuality and economics
Option C: The importance of sisterly bonds
Option D: All of these answers
Correct Answer: All of these answers ✔
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Option A: always fighting for good against evil.
Option B: fortunate in always coming out victorious.
Option C: nearly superhuman in his powers but tortured by a psychological weight.
Option D: devoted to religion above all things
Correct Answer: nearly superhuman in his powers but tortured by a psychological weight. ✔
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Option A: The poems defend the industrial revolution as helping England’s economy.
Option B: The poems criticize religious institutions for not helping the oppressed.
Option C: The poems reject experience in favor of innocence.
Option D: The poems reject innocence in favor of experience.
Correct Answer: The poems criticize religious institutions for not helping the oppressed. ✔
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Option A: Horror
Option B: The sublime
Option C: Suspense
Option D: Picaresque
Correct Answer: Picaresque ✔
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Option A: A refusal to emphasize the innate goodness of humanity
Option B: An emphasis on the power of sympathy to allow individuals to feel others’ pain and joy
Option C: A sense of awe in the power of the natural world
Option D: A parody of the interest in emotion that developed out of the Enlightenment interest in reason
Correct Answer: An emphasis on the power of sympathy to allow individuals to feel others’ pain and joy ✔
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Option A: Two characters in an epic who are romantically involved
Option B: Two lines of rhyming verse written in iambic pentameter
Option C: The concluding lines of any poem
Option D: Two characters who act as foils in a comedy of manners
Correct Answer: Two lines of rhyming verse written in iambic pentameter ✔
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Option A: the ultimate expression of humankind’s ability to control its own destiny.
Option B: a misguided attempt to overthrow human nature by rejecting tradition.
Option C: a necessary change that was beginning to go astray.
Option D: an event that had little consequence to England
Correct Answer: a misguided attempt to overthrow human nature by rejecting tradition. ✔
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Option A: through the personal, direct appeal enabled by his epistolary form.
Option B: by emphasizing the character’s fright.
Option C: by emphasizing sexual morality.
Option D: through the sentimental attempt to make readers strongly identify with the character’s feelings.
Correct Answer: by emphasizing the character’s fright. ✔
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Option A: He created a radically new form.
Option B: He used unusual, arcane words.
Option C: He made obscure allusions.
Option D: All of these answers
Correct Answer: All of these answers ✔
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Option A: a sonnet expressing his devotion to his wife.
Option B: a dramatic monologue spoken by a murderer.
Option C: a dramatic monologue spoken by Browning.
Option D: an epic describing a great romance.
Correct Answer: a dramatic monologue spoken by a murderer. ✔
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Option A: neoclassical emphasis on traditional form and romantic subjectivism.
Option B: romantic rejection of science and neoclassical use of mythology.
Option C: romantic emphasis on personal feelings combined with a neoclassical focus on social context.
Option D: romantic critique of industrialization and neoclassical use of satire.
Correct Answer: romantic emphasis on personal feelings combined with a neoclassical focus on social context. ✔
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