英国文学期末考试试题 广外
英国文学期末考试试题广外
英国文学期末考试试题(外语外贸大学)Instructions: This examination consists of 5 parts, and the total time for the examination is 2 hours. All the answers should be entered onto the Answer Sheet.Part I:Multiple Choices (10%)Choose the best answer to the following sentences.1. Which of the following is NOT a feature of Beowulf?A. AlliterationB. Anglo-Saxons’ early life in EnglandC. Germanic languageD. The national epic of Anglo-Saxon people2. English Renaissance Period was an age of .A. prose and novelB. poetry and dramaC. essays and journalsD. ballads and songs3. The main literary form of the early 17th century was poetry. John Milton was acknowledged as the greatest. Besides him, there were two groups of poets. They were the Cavalier poets and .A. the lake poetsB. the university witsC. the Metaphysical poetsD. the Romantic poets4. Pamela is widely considered to be the first novel and was written by ___________.A. Thomas HardyB. James JoyceC. Samuel RichardsonD. Henry Fielding5. The publication of , which was the joint work of William Wordsworth and Samuel T. Coleridge, marked the beginning of the Romantic Age in England.A. Don JuanB. The Rime of the Ancient MarinerC. Lyrical BalladsD. Queen Mab6. Among the most famous realistic novelists of the Victorian age are , W. M. Thackeray,Bronte sisters, etc.A. Joseph ConradB. Henry FieldingC. Charles DickensD. D. H. Lawrence7.In James Joyce’s ____________ the story “Eveline” paints a portrait of a young woman from Dublin deciding whether or not to leave her hometown.A. UlyssesB. OrlandoC. DublinersD. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man8. In the 18th century England, satire was much used in writing. Literature of this age produced some excellent satirists, such as Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding and .William Blake B. Robert Burns C. Alexander Pope D. Daniel Defoe9. William Wordsworth never used “gaudy and inane phraseology” because he felt that poetry should ____________.A. be read only by the well-educatedB. use difficult vocabulary to express complicated emotionsC. use simple speech to communicate the truths of human experienceD. rely on strange and uncommon words to bring people new experiences10. Virginia Woolf is renowned for adopting the technique, which displays the sequence of thoughts and impressions in a person’s mind.A. mind-readingB. third-person narrationC. stream-of-consciousnessD. feministPart II:Gap Filling (10%)Complete the following sentences and write your answers on the Answer Sheet.1. Geoffrey Chaucer’s work gives us a picture of the condition of English life of his day, such as its work and play, its deeds and dreams, its fun and sympathy.2. During the Norman Conquest, the most important form of literary composition is, the representative of which is the legend of King Arthur and the round table knights.3. Epoch of Renaissance witnessed a particular development of English drama. It was William Shakespeare and who made blank verse the principal vehicle of expression in drama.4. Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth and are generally regarded as William Shakespeare’s four great tragedies.5. Edmund Spenser is generally regarded as the greatest nondramatic poet of the Elizabethan Age. His fame is chiefly based on his masterpiece .6. In Elizabethan Period,wrote more than 50 excellent essays, which made him one of the best essayists in English literature.7. The was a progressive intellectual movement throughout western Europe in the 18th century.8. In the latter part of the 18th century, there appeared, as a reaction against Reason,___________ novel and literature of sentimentality.9. Th omas Gray’s highly praised poem shows the poet’s sympathy for the poor, and condemns the great ones who despise the poor and bring sufferings to the common people.10. The Romantic movement in England had two significant movements as its background: the French Revolution and .11 ________ is perhaps the most talented early novelist. She wrote a number of books concerning young, relatively wealthy women pursuing marriage, such as Pride and Prejudice and Emma.12. George Byron is chiefly known f or his two long poems. One is Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage and the other is .13 John Keats wrote several famous ___________, a type of lyric poem that is meditative and formal.14. ________ _, the eldest of the two famous novelist sisters, wrote Jane Eyre in the middle of the 19th century.15. _____________ monologue was first successfully used in poetry by Robert Browning.16. One of the most striking features of in the 20th century literature is anti-past,anti-tradition, anti-novel, anti-hero, etc.17. __________, the manifesto of modernist poetry in the 20th century, was written by T. S. Eliot.18. A Passage to India,Howard’s End, and A Room with a View are three of the most famous novels by ___________.19. Lord Jim is one of the most famous novels by _________, who was born in Poland and learned English as his third language.20. Man and Superman and Pygmalion are two of most famous plays by __________.Part III:Definition of Terms (15%)Choose THREE out of the following terms and explain them in two or three sentences.Sonnet;Point of view;Soliloquy;Setting;Heroic coupletPart IV:Appreciation (40%)Choose TWO of the following three excerpts and write a passage of comment (about 80 words)on each one. Your comment should cover the questions after each excerpt.Excerpt 1:I wandered lonely as a cloudThat floats on high o’er vales and hills,When all at once I saw a crowd,A host, of golden daffodils;Beside the lake, beneath the trees,Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.…For oft, when on my couch I lieIn vacant or in pensive mood,They flash upon that inward eyeWhich is the bliss of solitude;And then my heart with pleasure fills,And dances with the daffodils.(William Wordsworth,“I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud”)Questions:1. What is the central image of this poem?What is the poet’s reaction as revealed in the poem?2. Wordsworth believes that “All good poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings”a nd poetry “takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquility”. How does this poem reflect the poet’s philosophy of composition?Excerpt 2:The proper study of mankind is man.Placed on this isthmus of a middle state,A being darkly wise, and rudely great:With too much knowledge for the Skeptic side,With too much weakness for the Stoic’s pride,He hangs between; in doubt to act, or rest;In doubt to deem himself a God, or beast;In doubt his mind or body to prefer;Born but to die, and reasoning such,Whether he thinks too little or too much;Chaos of thought and passion, all confused;Still by himself abused or disabused;Created half to rise, and half to fall;(Alexander Pope, An Essay on Man)Questions:1. What’s the topic of the above lines?2.Summarize the main idea in a few sentences.Excerpt 3:I shall now therefore humbly propose my own thoughts, which I hope will not be liable to the least objection.I have been assured by a very knowing American of my acquaintance in London, that a young healthy child well nursed is at a year old a most delicious, nourishing, and wholesome food,whether stewed, roasted, baked, or boiled; and I make no doubt that it will equally serve in a fricassee or a ragout.I do therefore humbly offer it to public consideration that of the hundred and twenty thousand children, already computed, twenty thousand may be reserved for breed, whereof only one fourth part to be males, which is more than we allow to sheep, black cattle, or swine; and my reason is that these children are seldom the fruits of marriage, a circumstance not much regarded by our savages, therefore one male will be sufficient to serve four females. That the remaininghundred thousand may at a year old be offered in sale to the person of quality and fortune through the kingdom, always advising the mother to let them suck plentifully in the last month, so as to render them plump and fat for a good table. A child will make two dishes at an entertainment for friends, and when the family dines alone, the fore or hind quarter will make a reasonable dish; and seasoned with a little pepper or salt will be very good boiled on the fourth day,especially in winter.(Jonathan Swift, A Modest Proposal)Questions:1. What is the author’s modest proposal in the passage? And what do you think is his real idea behind it?2. What kind of tone is shown in the passage?(Explain it with specific quotations from the text)Part V. Critical Reading (25%)Read the attached short story and answer the questions in essay form.1. What’s the turning point in the murder trial? Describe it in a few sentences.2.Read carefully the last two paragraphs of the story and comment, in the form of a 150-200-word essay, on the message or real meaning of the author.The Case for the DefenseGraham Greene1 It was the strangest murder trial that I ever attended. They named it the Peckham murder in the headlines, though Northwood Street, where the old woman was found battered to death,was not strictly speaking in Peckham. This was not one of those cases of circumstantial evidence in which you feel the juryman’s anxiety—because mistakes have been made—like domes of silence muting the court. No, this murderer was all but found with the body; no one present when the Crown counsel outlined his case believed that the man in the dock stood any chance at all.2 He was a heavy stout man with bulging bloodshot eyes. All his muscles seemed to be in his thighs. Yes, an ugly customer, one you wouldn’t forget in a hurry—and that was an important point because the Crown proposed to call four witnesses who hadn’t forgotten him, who had seen him hurrying away from the little red villa in Northwood Street. The clock had just struck two in the morning.3 Mrs. Salmon in 15 Northwood Street had been unable to sleep; she heard a door click shut and thought it was her own gate. So she went to the window and saw Adams (that was his name)on the steps of Mrs. Parker’s house. He had just come out and h e was wearing gloves. He had a hammer in his hand and she saw him drop it into the laurel bushes at the front gate. But before he moved away, he had looked up—at her window. The fatal instinct that tells a man when he is watched exposed him in the light of a street-lamp to her gaze—his eyes suffused with horrifying and brutal fear,like an animal’s when you raise a whip. I talked afterwards to Mrs. Salmon,who naturally after the astonishing verdict went in fear herself. As I imagined did all the witnesses—Henry MacDougall, who had been driving home from Benfleet late and nearly ran Adams down at the corner of Northwood Street. Adams was walking in the middle of the road looking dazed. And old Mr. Wheeler, who lived next door to Mrs. Parker, at No. 12 and was waken by a noise—like a chair falling—through the thin-as-paper villa wall, and got up and looked out of the window,just as Mrs. Salmon had done,saw Adam’s back and, as he turned, those bulging eyes. In Laurel Avenue he had been seen by yet another witness—his luck was badly out; he might as well have committed the crime in broad daylight.4 “I understand,” the counsel said,“that the defense proposes to plead mistaken identity. Adams’ wife will tell you that he was with her at two in the morning on F ebruary 14, but after you have heard the witnesses for the Crown and examined carefully the features of the prisoner,I do not think you will be prepared to admit the possibility of a mistake.”5 It was all over, you would have said, but the hanging.6 After the formal evidence had been given by the policeman who had found the body and the surgeon who examined it, Mrs. Salmon was called. She was the ideal witness, with her slight Scotch accent and her expression of honesty, care and kindness.7 The counsel for the Crown brought the story gently out. She spoke very firmly. There was no malice in her, and no sense of importance at standing there in the Central Criminal Court with a judge in scarlet handing on her words and the reporters writing them down. Yes, she said,and then she had gone down stairs and rung up the police station.8 “And do you see the man here in court?”She looked straight and at the big man in the dock, who stared at her with his Pekingese eyes without emotion.“Yes,” she sai d,“there he is.”“You are quite certain?”She said simply,“I couldn’t be mistaken,sir.”It was as easy as that.“Thank you,Mrs. Salmon.”9 Counsel for the defense rose to cross-examine. If you had reported as many murder trials as I have, you would have known beforehand what line he would take. And I was right, up to a point.10 “Now, Mrs. Salmon,you must have remembered that a man’s life may depend on your evidence.”“I do remember it,sir.”“Is your eyesight good?”“I have never had to wear spectacles,sir.”“You are a woman of fifty-five?”“Fifty-six,sir.”“And the man you saw was on the other side of the road?”“Yes,sir.”“And it was two o’clock in the morning. You must have remarkable eyes, Mrs. Salmon?”“No, sir. There was moonlight, and the man looked up,he had the lamplight on his face.”11 I couldn’t make out what he was at. He couldn’t have expected any other answer than the one he got.12 “None whatever,sir. It isn’t a face one forgets.”13 Counsel took a look around the court for a moment. Then he said,“Do you mind, Mrs. Salmon, examining again the people in court? No, not the prisoner. Stand up, please, Mr. Adams,” and there at the back of the court with thick stout body and muscular legs and a pair of bulging eyes, was the exact image of the man in the dock. He was even dressed the same—tight blue suit and striped tie.14 “Now think very carefully, Mrs. Salmon. Can you still swear that the man you saw drop the hammer in Mrs. Parker’s garden was the p risoner—and not this man, who is his twin brother?”15 Of course she couldn’t. She looked from one to the other and didn’t say a word.16 There the big brute sat in the dock with his legs crossed, and there he stood too at the back of the court and they both stared at Mrs. Salmon. She shook her head.17 What we saw then was the end of the case. There wasn’t a witness prepared to swear that it was the prisoner he’d seen. And the brother? He had his own alibi too; he was with his wife.18 And so the man was acquitted for lack of evidence. But whether if he did the murder and not his brother—he was punished or not,I don’t know. That extraordinary day had an extraordinary end. I followed Mrs. Salmon out of court and we got wedged in the crowd who were waiting, of course, for the twins. The police tried to drive the crowd away, but all they could do was keep the roadway clear for traffic. I learned later that they tried to get the twins to leave by a back way,but they wouldn’t. One of them—no one knew which—said,“I’ve been acquitted,haven’t I?” and they walked bang out of the front entrance. Then it happened. I don’t know how, though I was only six feet away. The crowd moved and somehow one of the twins got pushed on to the road right in front of a bus.19 He gave a squeal like a rabbit and that was all; he was dead, his skull smashed just as Mrs. Parker’s had been. Divine vengeance? I wish I knew. There was the other Adams getting on his feet from beside the body and looking straight over at Mrs. Salmon. He was crying, but whether he was the murderer or the innocent man nobody will ever be able to tell. But if you were Mrs. Salmon, could you sleep at night?。
英国文学期末考试试题 广外
英国文学期末考试试题(广东外语外贸大学)Instructions:This examination consists of 5 parts,and the total time for the examination is 2 hours. All the answers should be entered onto the Answer Sheet.Part I:Multiple Choices (10%)Choose the best answer to the following sentences.1.Which of the following is NOT a feature of Beowulf?A. AlliterationB. Anglo-Saxons’ early life in EnglandC. Germanic languageD. The national epic of Anglo-Saxon people2.English Renaissance Period was an age of.A. prose and novelB. poetry and dramaC. essays and journalsD. ballads and songs3.The main literary form of the early 17th century was poetry. John Milton was acknowledged as the greatest. Besides him,there were two groups of poets. They were the Cavalier poets and.A. the lake poetsB. the university witsC. the Metaphysical poetsD. the Romantic poets4. Pamela is widely considered to be the first novel and was written by ___________.A. Thomas HardyB. James JoyceC. Samuel RichardsonD. Henry Fielding5.The publication of,which was the joint work of William Wordsworth and Samuel T. Coleridge,marked the beginning of the Romantic Age in England.A. Don JuanB. The Rime of the Ancient MarinerC. Lyrical BalladsD. Queen Mab6.Among the most famous realistic novelists of the Victorian age are,W. M. Thackeray,Bronte sisters,etc.A. Joseph ConradB. Henry FieldingC. Charles DickensD. D. H. Lawrence7.In James Joyce’s ____________ the story “Eveline” paints a portrait of a young woman from Dublin deciding whether or not to leave her hometown.A. UlyssesB. OrlandoC. DublinersD. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man8.In the 18th century England,satire was much used in writing. Literature of this age produced some excellent satirists,such as Jonathan Swift,Henry Fielding and.William Blake B. Robert Burns C.Alexander Pope D. Daniel Defoe9.William Wordsworth never used “gaudy and inane phraseology” because he felt that poetry should ____________.A. be read only by the well-educatedB. use difficult vocabulary to express complicated emotionsC. use simple speech to communicate the truths of human experienceD. rely on strange and uncommon words to bring people new experiences10. Virginia Woolf is renowned for adopting the technique,which displays the sequence of thoughts and impressions in a person’s mind.A. mind-readingB. third-person narrationC. stream-of-consciousnessD. feministPart II:Gap Filling (10%)Complete the following sentences and write your answers on the Answer Sheet.1.Geoffrey Chaucer’s work gives us a picture of the condition of English life of his day,such as its work and play,its deeds and dreams,its fun and sympathy.2.During the Norman Conquest,the most important form of literary composition is,the representative of which is the legend of King Arthur and the round table knights.3.Epoch of Renaissance witnessed a particular development of English drama. It was William Shakespeare and who made blank verse the principal vehicle of expression in drama.4.Hamlet,Othello,Macbeth and are generally regarded as William Shakespeare’s four great tragedies.5.Edmund Spenser is generally regarded as the greatest nondramatic poet of the Elizabethan Age. His fame is chiefly based on his masterpiece.6.In Elizabethan Period,wrote more than 50 excellent essays,which made him one of the best essayists in English literature.7.The was a progressive intellectual movement throughout western Europe in the 18th century.8.In the latter part of the 18th century,there appeared,as a reaction against Reason,___________ novel and literature of sentimentality.9.Thomas Gray’s highly praised poem shows the poet’s sympathy for the poor,and condemns the great ones who despise the poor and bring sufferings to the common people.10.The Romantic movement in England had two significant movements as its background:the French Revolution and.11________ is perhaps the most talented early novelist. She wrote a number of books concerning young,relatively wealthy women pursuing marriage,such as Pride and Prejudice and Emma.12.George Byron is chiefly known for his two long poems. One is Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage and the other is.13John Keats wrote several famous ___________, a type of lyric poem that is meditative and formal.14._________,the eldest of the two famous novelist sisters,wrote Jane Eyre in the middle of the 19th century.15._____________ monologue was first successfully used in poetry by Robert Browning.16.One of the most striking features of in the 20th century literature is anti-past,anti-tradition,anti-novel,anti-hero,etc.17.__________,the manifesto of modernist poetry in the 20th century,was written by T. S. Eliot.18. A Passage to India,Howard’s End,and A Room with a View are three of the most famous novels by ___________.19.Lord Jim is one of the most famous novels by _________,who was born in Poland and learned English as his third language.20.Man and Superman and Pygmalion are two of most famous plays by __________.Part III:Definition of Terms (15%)Choose THREE out of the following terms and explain them in two or three sentences.Sonnet;Point of view;Soliloquy;Setting;Heroic coupletPart IV:Appreciation (40%)Choose TWO of the following three excerpts and write a passage of comment (about 80 words)on each one. Your comment should cover the questions after each excerpt.Excerpt 1:I wandered lonely as a cloudThat floats on high o’er vales and hills,When all at once I saw a crowd,A host,of golden daffodils;Beside the lake,beneath the trees,Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.…For oft,when on my couch I lieIn vacant or in pensive mood,They flash upon that inward eyeWhich is the bliss of solitude;And then my heart with pleasure fills,And dances with the daffodils.(William Wordsworth,“I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud”)Questions:1. What is the central image of this poem?What is the poet’s reaction as revealed in the poem?2. Wordsworth believes that “All good poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings”and poetry “takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquility”. How does this poem reflect the poet’s philosophy of composition?Excerpt 2:The proper study of mankind is man.Placed on this isthmus of a middle state,A being darkly wise,and rudely great:With too much knowledge for the Skeptic side,With too much weakness for the Stoic’s pride,He hangs between;in doubt to act,or rest;In doubt to deem himself a God,or beast;In doubt his mind or body to prefer;Born but to die,and reasoning such,Whether he thinks too little or too much;Chaos of thought and passion,all confused;Still by himself abused or disabused;Created half to rise,and half to fall;(Alexander Pope,An Essay on Man)Questions:1. What’s the topic of the above lines?2.Summarize the main idea in a few sentences.Excerpt 3:I shall now therefore humbly propose my own thoughts,which I hope will not be liable to the least objection.I have been assured by a very knowing American of my acquaintance in London,that a young healthy child well nursed is at a year old a most delicious,nourishing,and wholesomefood,whether stewed,roasted,baked,or boiled;and I make no doubt that it will equally serve in a fricassee or a ragout.I do therefore humbly offer it to public consideration that of the hundred and twenty thousand children,already computed,twenty thousand may be reserved for breed,whereof only one fourth part to be males,which is more than we allow to sheep,black cattle,or swine;and my reason is that these children are seldom the fruits of marriage,a circumstance not much regarded by our savages,therefore one male will be sufficient to serve four females. That the remaining hundred thousand may at a year old be offered in sale to the person of quality and fortune through the kingdom,always advising the mother to let them suck plentifully in the last month,so as to render them plump and fat for a good table.A child will make two dishes at an entertainment for friends,and when the family dines alone,the fore or hind quarter will make a reasonable dish;and seasoned with a little pepper or salt will be very good boiled on the fourth day,especially in winter.(Jonathan Swift,A Modest Proposal)Questions:1. What is the author’s modest proposal in the passage?And what do you think is his real idea behind it?2. What kind of tone is shown in the passage?(Explain it with specific quotations from the text)Part V. Critical Reading (25%)Read the attached short story and answer the questions in essay form.1. What’s the turning point in the murder trial?Describe it in a few sentences.2.Read carefully the last two paragraphs of the story and comment,in the form of a 150-200-word essay,on the message or real meaning of the author.The Case for the DefenseGraham Greene1It was the strangest murder trial that I ever attended. They named it the Peckham murder in the headlines,though Northwood Street,where the old woman was found battered to death,was not strictly speaking in Peckham. This was not one of those cases of circumstantial evidence in which you feel the juryman’s anxiety—because mistakes havebeen made—like domes of silence muting the court. No,this murderer was all but found with the body;no one present when the Crown counsel outlined his case believed that the man in the dock stood any chance at all.2He was a heavy stout man with bulging bloodshot eyes. All his muscles seemed to be in his thighs. Yes,an ugly customer,one you wouldn’t forget in a hurry—and that was an important point because the Crown proposed to call four witnesses who hadn’t forgotten him,who had seen him hurrying away from the little red villa in Northwood Street. The clock had just struck two in the morning.3Mrs. Salmon in 15 Northwood Street had been unable to sleep;she heard a door click shut and thought it was her own gate. So she went to the window and saw Adams (that was his name)on the steps of Mrs. Parker’s house. He had just come out and h e was wearing gloves. He had a hammer in his hand and she saw him drop it into the laurel bushes at the front gate. But before he moved away,he had looked up—at her window. The fatal instinct that tells a man when he is watched exposed him in the light of a street-lamp to her gaze—his eyes suffused with horrifying and brutal fear,like an animal’s when you raise a whip. I talked afterwards to Mrs. Salmon,who naturally after the astonishing verdict went in fear herself. As I imagined did all the witnesses—Henry MacDougall,who had been driving home from Benfleet late and nearly ran Adams down at the corner of Northwood Street. Adams was walking in the middle of the road looking dazed. And old Mr. Wheeler,who lived next door to Mrs. Parker,at No. 12 and was waken by a noise—like a chair falling—through the thin-as-paper villa wall,and got up and looked out of the window,just as Mrs. Salmon had done,saw Adam’s back and,as he turned,those bulging eyes. In Laurel Avenue he had been seen by yet another witness—his luck was badly out;he might as well have committed the crime in broad daylight.4“I understand,” the counsel said,“that the defense proposes to plead mistaken identity. Adams’ wife will tell you that he was with her at two in the morning on F ebruary 14,but after you have heard the witnesses for the Crown and examined carefully the features of the prisoner,I do not think you will be prepared to admit the possibility of a mistake.”5It was all over,you would have said,but the hanging.6After the formal evidence had been given by the policeman who had found the body and the surgeon who examined it,Mrs. Salmon was called. She was the ideal witness,with her slight Scotch accent and her expression of honesty,care and kindness.7The counsel for the Crown brought the story gently out. She spoke very firmly. There was no malice in her,and no sense of importance at standing there in the Central Criminal Court with a judge in scarlet handing on her words and the reporters writing them down. Yes,she said,and then she had gone down stairs and rung up the police station.8“And do you see the man here in court?”She looked straight and at the big man in the dock,who stared at her with his Pekingese eyes without emotion.“Yes,” she sai d,“there he is.”“You are quite certain?”She said simply,“I couldn’t be mistaken,sir.”It was as easy as that.“Thank you,Mrs. Salmon.”9Counsel for the defense rose to cross-examine. If you had reported as many murder trials as I have,you would have known beforehand what line he would take. And I was right,up to a point.10“Now,Mrs. Salmon,you must have remembered that a man’s life may depend on your evidence.”“I do remember it,sir.”“Is your eyesight good?”“I have never had to wear spectacles,sir.”“You are a woman of fifty-five?”“Fifty-six,sir.”“And the man you saw was on the other side of the road?”“Yes,sir.”“And it was two o’clock in the morning. You must have remarkable eyes,Mrs. Salmon?”“No,sir. There was moonlight,and the man looked up,he had the lamplight on his face.”11I couldn’t make out what he was at. He couldn’t have expected any other answer than the one he got.12“None whatever,sir. It isn’t a face one forgets.”13Counsel took a look around the court for a moment. Then he said,“Do you mind,Mrs. Salmon,examining again the people in court?No,not the prisoner. Stand up,please,Mr. Adams,” and there at the back of the court with thick stout body and muscular legs and a pair of bulging eyes,was the exact image of the man in the dock. He was even dressed the same—tight blue suit and striped tie.14“Now think very carefully,Mrs. Salmon. Can you still swear that the man you saw drop the hammer in Mrs. Parker’s garden was the p risoner—and not this man,who is his twin brother?”15Of course she couldn’t. She looked from one to the other and didn’t say a word.16There the big brute sat in the dock with his legs crossed,and there he stood too at the back of the court and they both stared at Mrs. Salmon. She shook her head.17What we saw then was the end of the case. There wasn’t a witness prepared to swear that it was the prisoner he’d seen. And the brother?He had his own alibi too;he was with his wife.18And so the man was acquitted for lack of evidence. But whether if he did the murder and not his brother—he was punished or not,I don’t know. That extraordinary day had an extraordinary end. I followed Mrs. Salmon out of court and we got wedged in the crowd who were waiting,of course,for the twins. The police tried to drive the crowd away,but all they could do was keep the roadway clear for traffic. I learned later that they tried to get the twins to leave by a back way,but they wouldn’t. One of them—no one knew which—said,“I’ve been acquitted,haven’t I?” and they walked bang out of the front entrance. Then it happened. I don’t know how,though I was only six feet away. The crowd moved and somehow one of the twins got pushed on to the road right in front of a bus.19He gave a squeal like a rabbit and that was all;he was dead,his skull smashed just as Mrs. Parker’s had been. Divine vengeance?I wish I knew. There was the other Adams getting on his feet from beside the body and looking straight over at Mrs. Salmon. He wascrying,but whether he was the murderer or the innocent man nobody will ever be able to tell. But if you were Mrs. Salmon,could you sleep at night?。
英国文学期末考试题目
Part Ⅰ:Choose the relevant match from column B for each itemin column A. (10%)Section Acolumn A column B(1)Charles Dickens A. Oliver Twist(2) Lawrence B. The Forsyte Saga(3)Jonathan Swift C. The Jew of Malta(4)John Galsworthy D. Sons and Lovers(5)Christopher Marlowe E. A Modest ProposalSection Bcolumn A column B(1) Doctor Faustus A. Darcy(2) The Merchant of Venice B. Joseph Surface(3) The School for Scandal C. Portia(4) Pride and Prejudice D. Friday(5) Robinson Crusoe E. MephistophilisPart Ⅱ:Complete each of the following statements with a proper words ora phrase. (10%)1. The Canterbury Tales first time to use“”is Spenser’s idealism, his love of beauty, and his exquisite melody th at made him known as “______”.3. is a playwright & poet who is considered above all writers in the past and in the present time4. Pope is one of the first to introduce to England, for him the supreme value wasorder.5. The Pilgrim’s Progress is a religious , its purpose is to urge people to abide by Christian doctrines and seek salvation(拯救) through constant struggles with their own weaknesses and all kinds of social evils. Its predominant metaphor –life as a journey.6.The two major novelists of the Romantic period are Jane Austen and ______.7. William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge & Robert Southey are “”.8. James Joyce’s novels and short stories are regarded as his great works , all of which have the same setting: ______.9. Love and are the major themes in Jane Austin’s novels.10. is the most outstanding stream-of-consciousness novelist in 20th century English literaturePart Ⅲ:Each of the following statements below is followed by four alt ernative answers. Choosethe one that would best complete the statement. (40%)1. which of the following is regarded as the most successful religious allegory in the English language.?A. The Pilgrim's ProgressB. Grace Abounding to the Chief of SinnersC. The Life and Death of Mr. BadmanD. The Holy War2. Shakespeare’s four great tragedies are: Hamlet, Othello, ______ and ___.A. King Lear…Romeo and JulietB. King Lear…MacbethC. King John…J ulius CaesarD. King John…The Merchant of Venice3. it is generally regarded that keats's most important and mature poems are in the form Of____.A. elegyB. odeC. epicD. sonnet4. Francis bacon is best known for his ____which greatly influenced the development of this literary form.A. essaysB. poemsC. works D plays5. who is not the major figure of modernist movement?A. EliotB. JoyceC. Charles dickensD. Pound6. who is considered to be the best known English dramatist since Shakespeare?A . Oscar Wilde B. john Galsworthy C. . Yeats D. George Bernard Shaw7. Of the following poets, which is not regarded as 'lake poets'?A. Samuel Taylor ColeridgeB. Robert Southy C .William words worth D. William Shakespeare8. Which of the following cannot describe 'Byronic hero'?A. proudB. mysteriousC. noble originD. progressive9. who is regarded as a 'worshipper of nature'.A. john KeatsB. William BlakeC. William WordsworthD. Jane Austen10. Thomas Gray’s“Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”once and for all established his fame as theleader of the ______ poetry.A. RomanticB. PastoralC. NeoclassicalD. Sentimental11. “If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind”isquoted from Shelley’s______.A. The CloudB. Ode to LibertyC. Ode to the West WindD. To a Skylark12. According to the subjects, Wordsworth’s short poemscan be classified into two groups: poems about ______ and poems about _ _____.A. nature…love& friendshipB. nature…human lifeC. Scotland…love& friendshipD. Scotland…human life13. Which of the following is NOT James Joyce’s worksA. The Portrait of a LadyB. DublinersC. UlyssesD. Finnegans Wake14. As a leading Romanticist, Byron’s chief contributionis his creation of the “Byronic hero”, a ______.A. proud, strong-minded rebel under pressureB. proud, mysterious rebel of noble birthC. proud, selfish person with evil heartD. a proud, vindictive person without mercy15. In his works, ______ set out a full map and a large-scalecriticism of 19th century England, particularlyLondon.A. DickensB. HardyC. George EliotD. Walter Peter16. The name of Robert Browning is often associatedwith the term______.A. dramatic monologueB. transferred epitetC. blank verseD. free verse17. In Lawrence’s opinion, the______ is responsible for the unhealthy dev elopment of human personalities, the perversion of love and the failure o f human fulfillment in marital relationships.A. the First World WarB. original sinC. Victorian conventionsD. mechanical civilization18. .__________is the pseudonym of Marry Ann Evans.A. Jane AustenB. George EliotC. D. Anne Bronte19. .__________is regarded as the most prominent stream-of-consciousness novelist.A. James JoyceB. Virginia WoolfC. D.20. .__________, a collection of 15 short stories, is the firstimportant work of James Joyce’s life longpreoccupation with Dublin life.A. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young ManB. DublinersD. Finnegans WakePart Ⅳ:Answer the following questions(40%)1. W hat are the reasons for Chaucer’s being honored as “the father of English poetry”(10 points )2. What is dramatic monologue (5 points)Defoe’s novel Robinson Crusoe was a great success partly because the protagonist was a real middle-class hero. Discuss Crusoe, the protagonist of the novel, as an embodiment of the rising middle-class virtues in the mid-eighteenth century England. (15points)briefly the character of Elizabeth, the heroine in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.(10 points )。
英国文学期末考试精彩试题 广外
英国文学期末考试试题(外语外贸大学)Instructions:This examination consists of 5 parts,and the total time for the examination is 2 hours. All the answers should be entered onto the Answer Sheet.Part I:Multiple Choices (10%)Choose the best answer to the following sentences.1.Which of the following is NOT a feature of Beowulf?A. AlliterationB. Anglo-Saxons’ early life in EnglandC. Germanic languageD. The national epic of Anglo-Saxon people2.English Renaissance Period was an age of.A. prose and novelB. poetry and dramaC. essays and journalsD. ballads and songs3.The main literary form of the early 17th century was poetry. John Milton was acknowledged as the greatest. Besides him,there were two groups of poets. They were the Cavalier poets and.A. the lake poetsB. the university witsC. the Metaphysical poetsD. the Romantic poets4. Pamela is widely considered to be the first novel and was written by ___________.A. Thomas HardyB. James JoyceC. Samuel RichardsonD. Henry Fielding5.The publication of,which was the joint work of William Wordsworth and Samuel T. Coleridge,marked the beginning of the Romantic Age in England.A. Don JuanB. The Rime of the Ancient MarinerC. Lyrical BalladsD. Queen Mab6.Among the most famous realistic novelists of the Victorian age are,W. M. Thackeray,Bronte sisters,etc.A. Joseph ConradB. Henry FieldingC. Charles DickensD. D. H. Lawrence7.In James Joyce’s ____________ the story “Eveline” paints a portrait of a young woman from Dublin deciding whether or not to leave her hometown.A. UlyssesB. OrlandoC. DublinersD. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man8.In the 18th century England,satire was much used in writing. Literature of this age produced some excellent satirists,such as Jonathan Swift,Henry Fielding and.William Blake B. Robert Burns C.Alexander Pope D. Daniel Defoe9.William Wordsworth never used “gaudy and inane phraseology” because he felt that poetry should ____________.A. be read only by the well-educatedB. use difficult vocabulary to express complicated emotionsC. use simple speech to communicate the truths of human experienceD. rely on strange and uncommon words to bring people new experiences10. Virginia Woolf is renowned for adopting the technique,which displays the sequence of thoughts and impressions in a person’s mind.A. mind-readingB. third-person narrationC. stream-of-consciousnessD. feministPart II:Gap Filling (10%)Complete the following sentences and write your answers on the Answer Sheet.1.Geoffrey Chaucer’s work gives us a picture of the condition of English life of his day,such as its work and play,its deeds and dreams,its fun and sympathy.2.During the Norman Conquest,the most important form of literary composition is,the representative of which is the legend of King Arthur and the round table knights.3.Epoch of Renaissance witnessed a particular development of English drama. It was William Shakespeare and who made blank verse the principal vehicle of expression in drama.4.Hamlet,Othello,Macbeth and are generally regarded as William Shakespeare’s four great tragedies.5.Edmund Spenser is generally regarded as the greatest nondramatic poet of the Elizabethan Age. His fame is chiefly based on his masterpiece.6.In Elizabethan Period,wrote more than 50 excellent essays,which made him one of the best essayists in English literature.7.The was a progressive intellectual movement throughout western Europe in the 18th century.8.In the latter part of the 18th century,there appeared,as a reaction against Reason,___________ novel and literature of sentimentality.9.Thomas Gray’s highly praised poem shows the poet’s sympathy for the poor,and condemns the great ones who despise the poor and bring sufferings to the common people.10.The Romantic movement in England had two significant movements as its background:the French Revolution and.11________ is perhaps the most talented early novelist. She wrote a number of books concerning young,relatively wealthy women pursuing marriage,such as Pride and Prejudice and Emma.12.George Byron is chiefly known f or his two long poems. One is Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage and the other is.13John Keats wrote several famous ___________, a type of lyric poem that is meditative and formal.14._________,the eldest of the two famous novelist sisters,wrote Jane Eyre in the middle of the 19th century.15._____________ monologue was first successfully used in poetry by Robert Browning.16.One of the most striking features of in the 20th century literature is anti-past,anti-tradition,anti-novel,anti-hero,etc.17.__________,the manifesto of modernist poetry in the 20th century,was written by T. S. Eliot.18. A Passage to India,Howard’s End,and A Room with a View are three of the most famous novels by ___________.19.Lord Jim is one of the most famous novels by _________,who was born in Poland and learned English as his third language.20.Man and Superman and Pygmalion are two of most famous plays by __________.Part III:Definition of Terms (15%)Choose THREE out of the following terms and explain them in two or three sentences.Sonnet;Point of view;Soliloquy;Setting;Heroic coupletPart IV:Appreciation (40%)Choose TWO of the following three excerpts and write a passage of comment (about 80 words)on each one. Your comment should cover the questions after each excerpt.Excerpt 1:I wandered lonely as a cloudThat floats on high o’er vales and hills,When all at once I saw a crowd,A host,of golden daffodils;Beside the lake,beneath the trees,Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.…For oft,when on my couch I lieIn vacant or in pensive mood,They flash upon that inward eyeWhich is the bliss of solitude;And then my heart with pleasure fills,And dances with the daffodils.(William Wordsworth,“I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud”)Questions:1. What is the central image of this poem?What is the poet’s reaction as revealed in the poem?2. Wordsworth believes that “All good poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings” and poetry “takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquility”. How does this poem reflect the poet’s philosophy of composition?Excerpt 2:The proper study of mankind is man.Placed on this isthmus of a middle state,A being darkly wise,and rudely great:With too much knowledge for the Skeptic side,With too much weakness for the Stoic’s pride,He hangs between;in doubt to act,or rest;In doubt to deem himself a God,or beast;In doubt his mind or body to prefer;Born but to die,and reasoning such,Whether he thinks too little or too much;Chaos of thought and passion,all confused;Still by himself abused or disabused;Created half to rise,and half to fall;(Alexander Pope,An Essay on Man)Questions:1. What’s the topic of the above lines?2.Summarize the main idea in a few sentences.Excerpt 3:I shall now therefore humbly propose my own thoughts,which I hope will not be liable to the least objection.I have been assured by a very knowing American of my acquaintance in London,that a young healthy child well nursed is at a year old a most delicious,nourishing,and wholesomefood,whether stewed,roasted,baked,or boiled;and I make no doubt that it will equally serve in a fricassee or a ragout.I do therefore humbly offer it to public consideration that of the hundred and twenty thousand children,already computed,twenty thousand may be reserved for breed,whereof only one fourth part to be males,which is more than we allow to sheep,black cattle,or swine;and my reason is that these children are seldom the fruits of marriage,a circumstance not much regarded by our savages,therefore one male will be sufficient to serve four females. That the remaining hundred thousand may at a year old be offered in sale to the person of quality and fortune through the kingdom,always advising the mother to let them suck plentifully in the last month,so as to render them plump and fat for a good table.A child will make two dishes at an entertainment for friends,and when the family dines alone,the fore or hind quarter will make a reasonable dish;and seasoned with a little pepper or salt will be very good boiled on the fourth day,especially in winter.(Jonathan Swift,A Modest Proposal)Questions:1. What is the author’s modest proposal in the passage?And what do you think is his real idea behind it?2. What kind of tone is shown in the passage?(Explain it with specific quotations from the text)Part V. Critical Reading (25%)Read the attached short story and answer the questions in essay form.1. What’s the turning point in the murder trial?Describe it in a few sentences.2.Read carefully the last two paragraphs of the story and comment,in the form of a 150-200-word essay,on the message or real meaning of the author.The Case for the DefenseGraham Greene1It was the strangest murder trial that I ever attended. They named it the Peckham murder in the headlines,though Northwood Street,where the old woman was found battered to death,was not strictly speaking in Peckham. This was not one of those cases of circumstantial evidence in which you feel the juryman’s anxiety—because mistakes havebeen made—like domes of silence muting the court. No,this murderer was all but found with the body;no one present when the Crown counsel outlined his case believed that the man in the dock stood any chance at all.2He was a heavy stout man with bulging bloodshot eyes. All his muscles seemed to be in his thighs. Yes,an ugly customer,one yo u wouldn’t forget in a hurry—and that was an important point because the Crown proposed to call four witnesses who hadn’t forgotten him,who had seen him hurrying away from the little red villa in Northwood Street. The clock had just struck two in the morning.3Mrs. Salmon in 15 Northwood Street had been unable to sleep;she heard a door click shut and thought it was her own gate. So she went to the window and saw Adams (that was his name)on the steps of Mrs. Parker’s house. He had just come out and he was wearing gloves. He had a hammer in his hand and she saw him drop it into the laurel bushes at the front gate. But before he moved away,he had looked up—at her window. The fatal instinct that tells a man when he is watched exposed him in the light of a street-lamp to her gaze—his eyes suffused with horrifying and brutal fear,like an animal’s when you raise a whip. I talked afterwards to Mrs. Salmon,who naturally after the astonishing verdict went in fear herself. As I imagined did all the witnesses—Henry MacDougall,who had been driving home from Benfleet late and nearly ran Adams down at the corner of Northwood Street. Adams was walking in the middle of the road looking dazed. And old Mr. Wheeler,who lived next door to Mrs. Parker,at No. 12 and was waken by a noise—like a chair falling—through the thin-as-paper villa wall,and got up and looked out of the window,just as Mrs. Salmon had done,saw Adam’s back and,as he turned,those bulging eyes. In Laurel Avenue he had been seen by yet another witness—his luck was badly out;he might as well have committed the crime in broad daylight.4“I understand,” the counsel said,“that the defense proposes to plead mistaken identity. Adams’ wife will tell you that he was with her at two in the morning on Feb ruary 14,but after you have heard the witnesses for the Crown and examined carefully the features of the prisoner,I do not think you will be prepared to admit the possibility of a mistake.”5It was all over,you would have said,but the hanging.6After the formal evidence had been given by the policeman who had found the body and the surgeon who examined it,Mrs. Salmon was called. She was the ideal witness,with her slight Scotch accent and her expression of honesty,care and kindness.7The counsel for the Crown brought the story gently out. She spoke very firmly. There was no malice in her,and no sense of importance at standing there in the Central Criminal Court with a judge in scarlet handing on her words and the reporters writing them down. Yes,she said,and then she had gone down stairs and rung up the police station.8“And do you see the man here in court?”She looked straight and at the big man in the dock,who stared at her with his Pekingese eyes without emotion.“Yes,” she said,“there he is.”“You are quite certain?”She said simply,“I couldn’t be mistaken,sir.”It was as easy as that.“Thank you,Mrs. Salmon.”9Counsel for the defense rose to cross-examine. If you had reported as many murder trials as I have,you would have known beforehand what line he would take. And I was right,up to a point.10“Now,Mrs. Salmon,you must have remembered that a man’s life may depend on your evidence.”“I do remember it,sir.”“Is your eyesight good?”“I have never had t o wear spectacles,sir.”“You are a woman of fifty-five?”“Fifty-six,sir.”“And the man you saw was on the other side of the road?”“Yes,sir.”“And it was two o’clock in the morning. You must have remarkable eyes,Mrs. Salmon?”“No,sir. There was moonlight,and the man looked up,he had the lamplight on his face.”11I couldn’t make out what he was at. He couldn’t have expected any other answer than the one he got.12“None whatever,sir. It isn’t a face one forgets.”13Counsel took a look around the court for a moment. Then he said,“Do you mind,Mrs. Salmon,examining again the people in court?No,not the prisoner. Stand up,please,Mr. Adams,” and there at the back of the court with thick stout body and muscular legs and a pair of bulging eyes,was the exact image of the man in the dock. He was even dressed the same—tight blue suit and striped tie.14“Now think very carefully,Mrs. Salmon. Can you still swear that the man you saw drop the hammer in Mrs. Parker’s garden was the pri soner—and not this man,who is his twin brother?”15Of course she couldn’t. She looked from one to the other and didn’t say a word.16There the big brute sat in the dock with his legs crossed,and there he stood too at the back of the court and they both stared at Mrs. Salmon. She shook her head.17What we saw then was the end of the case. There wasn’t a witness prepared to swear that it was the prisoner he’d seen. And the brother?He had his own alibi too;he was with his wife.18And so the man was acquitted for lack of evidence. But whether if he did the murder and not his brother—he was punished or not,I don’t know. That extraordinary day had an extraordinary end. I followed Mrs. Salmon out of court and we got wedged in the crowd who were waiting,of course,for the twins. The police tried to drive the crowd away,but all they could do was keep the roadway clear for traffic. I learned later that they tried to get the twins to leave by a back way,but they wouldn’t. One of them—no one knew which—said,“I’ve been acquitted,haven’t I?” and they walked bang out of the front entrance. Then it happened. I don’t know how,though I was only six feet away. The crowd moved and somehow one of the twins got pushed on to the road right in front of a bus.19He gave a squeal like a rabbit and that was all;he was dead,his skull smashed just as Mrs. Parker’s had been. Divine vengeance?I wish I knew. There was the other Adams getting on his feet from beside the body and looking straight over at Mrs. Salmon. He wascrying,but whether he was the murderer or the innocent man nobody will ever be able to tell. But if you were Mrs. Salmon,could you sleep at night?。
英国文学期末考试题目(英语专业必备)
英国⽂学期末考试题⽬(英语专业必备)⼀.中古英语时期?Beowulf is theoldestpoem intheEnglishlanguage,andthemostimportantspecimen (范例、典范)ofAnglo-Saxonliterature,andalsotheoldestsurvivingepicintheEnglishlangua ge.Theromance isapopularliteraryforminthemedievalperiod(中世纪).Itusesverseorprosetosing knightly adventuresorotherheroicdeeds.GeoffreyChaucer,oneofthegreatestEnglishpoets,whosemasterpiece,TheCanterA.EdmundSpenserB.WilliamShakespeareC.FrancisBaconD.GeoffreyChaucer3.____isnotaplaywrightduringtheRenaissanceperiodonEngland.A.WilliamShakespeareB.GeoffreyChaucerC.ChristopherMarloweD.BenJohnson三.莎⼠⽐亚WilliamShakespeare“Alltheworld'sastage,andallthemenandwomenmerelyplayers.”——WilliamShakespeare WilliamShakespeareisconsideredthegreatestplaywrightintheworldandthefinestpo etwhohaswrittenintheEnglishlanguage.Shakespeareunderstoodpeoplemorethananyotherwriters.Hecouldcreatecharactersthathavemeaningbeyondthetimeandplaceo fhisplays.Hisfourtragediesare Hamlet(《哈姆雷特》),Othello(《奥赛罗》),KingLear(《李尔王》)andMacbeth(《麦克⽩》).Shakespeare’s sonnets,154innumber,aretheo nlydirectexpressionofthepoet’sownfeelings;Sonnet18deservesitsfamebecauseitisoneofthemostbeautifullywrittenvers esintheEnglishlanguage诗选Sonnet18A.GeographicalexplorationB.ReligiousreformationC.PublishingandtranslationD.Humanism.3.In“Sonnet18”,Shakespeare_________________.A.Meditateonthedestructivepoweroftimeandeternalbeautybypoetry.B.Satirize(讽刺)human’svanity.C.Predict(预测)theeternityoflove.D.Eulogize(颂扬)thepowerofthebeauty.4.WhichofthefollowingstatementbestillustratesthethemeofShakespeare’sSonnet1 8A.ThespeakereulogizesthepowerofNature.B.Thespeakersatirizeshumanvanity.C.Thespeakerpraisesthepowerofartisticcreation.D.Thespeakermeditatesonman’ssalvation.5.TheRenaissancereferstobetween14th-mid-17thcentury,whichwasunderthereignofQueen___andabsolutemonarchyinEnglandreacheditssummit,andinwhichthe’re almainstream(真正的⽂学主流)’was____.A.Victoria/poetryB.Elizabeth/dramaC.Mary/novelGulliver'sTravels,JonathanSwift'sbestfictionalwork,containsfourparts,eachab outoneparticularvoyageduringwhichGulliverhasextraordinaryadventuresonsomer emoteislandafterhehasmetwithshipwreckorpiracyorsomeothermisfortune.相关练习1.Inwhichofthefollowingworkscanyoufindthepropernames"Lilliput","Brobdingn ag",Houyhnhnm"and"Yahoo”A.ThePilgrim’sProgressB.TheFarrieQueeneC.Gulliver’sTravelsD.TheSchoolofScandal2.______isatypicalfeatureofSwift’swritings.A.ElegantstyleB.Causalnarration/doc/786579943.htmlplicatedsentencestructure3.TheHouyhnhnmsdepictedbyJonathanSwiftinGulliver’sTravelsare________.A.horsesthatareendowedwithreason.B.pigmiesthatareendowedwithadmirablequalitiesC.giantsthataresuperiorinwisdom.D.Hairy,wild,lowanddespicablecreatures,whoresemblehumanbeingsnotonlyinappe arancebutalsoinsomeotherways.五.浪漫主义诗歌(⼀)先驱:RobertBurns罗伯特·彭斯,WilliamBlake威廉·布莱克RobertBurns is anationalpoetofScotland,apoetofpeasants,hispoemsarewritteninesthedominantsubjectmatter.A.loveB.manC.natureD.death3.IntheRomanticperiod,____isthemostprosperousliteraryform.A.proseB.poetryC.fictionD.play4.RomanticismisaperiodofBritishliteratureroughlydatedfrom__.A.1660-----1798B.1798----1832C.1483-----1546D.1836-----19015.ThetwomajornovelistsoftheEnglishRomanticPeriodare_____andWalterScott. A.WashingtonIrving B.JaneAustenC.HermanMelvilleD.CharlesDickens6.WilliamWordsworth,aromanticpoet,advocatedallthefollowingEXCEPT___.A.theuseofeverydaylanguagespokenbythecommonpeopleB.theexpressionofthespontaneousoverflowofpowerfulfeelingsC.theuseofhumbleandrusticlifeassubjectmatterD.theuseofelegantwordingandinflatedfiguresofspeech7.Thepublicationof“_______”markedthebeginningofRomanticAge.A.DonJuanB.TheRimeoftheAncientMarinerC.TheLyricalBalladsD.QueenMab8.ThemajorrepresentativesofthepoeticrevolutioninEnglishRomanticperiodwereSTheyflashuponthatinwardeyeWhichistheblissofsolitude;Andthenmyheartwithpleasurefills,Anddanceswiththedaffodils.我好似⼀朵孤独的流云,⾼⾼地飘游在⼭⾕之上,突然我看到⼀⼤⽚鲜花,是⾦⾊的⽔仙遍地开放。
大二下半学期英国文学期末考试题
大二下半学期英国文学期末考试题一、听力第一节(共5小题,每小题1分)听下面5段对话。
每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的'相应位置。
听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。
每段对话仅读一遍。
【听力材料】:(Text 1)W: What’s new with you,Jack?M:Well,I met a really nice woman.We’ve been going out for three months and things look good now.(Text 2)M: When did you first find the door broken and things missing?W:After I got up,around 5:20.Then I called the police station.(Text 3)W: Pass me the flour,please.M:Which tin is it in?W:The one at the end of the shelf.It’s slightly smaller than the others.M:Oh,right.(Text 4)W:Do you know why George hasn’t come yet?M:Yes.He was planning to come,but his wife’s father fell down some stairs and they had to take him to a hospital.W:I’m sorry to hear that.(Text 5)W:Hi,Tony.How did your experiment go yesterday?M: Well,it wasn’t as easy as I had thought.I have to continue doing it tonight.(Text 6)M:Is that Ann?W:Yes.M:This is Mike.How are things with you?W:Oh,very well,but I’m very busy.M:Busy? But you’ve finished all your exams?W:Yes,but I have to help my little sister with her foreign language.M:How about coming out with me this evening?There’s a newfilm on.W:I’m afraid I can’t.A friend of mine is coming from the south and I have to go to the station to meet him.M:What a pity!How about the weekend then?W:No,I’ve arranged to go to an art exhibition with my parents.M:What about next week sometime?W:Maybe.(Text 7)W:I hear there will be a football competition between all senior schools next month.Is that so?M:Th at’s true.W:Would you please go into some more details?M:Well,the competition will be held in our school and it will begin on August 11.The competition will last a whole week.W:Anything else?M:Yes,both the girls and boys competition will be held at the same time.The girls competition will be held in the morning and the boys competition will be held in the afternoon.W:Yes? Sounds exciting.M:We are both members of our school football team.We should be ready for it.W:Of course.It’s a long time since we had the last football competition last time.I’m really looking forward to another competition.M:Me,too.(Text 8)W: Excuse me.I am from STM.We are carrying out a survey on the traffic in our city.Do you mind if I ask you some questions?M:No,not at all.Go ahead.W:Good,thanks.What do you do,sir?M:I am a teacher.I teach children French.W:Great.Do you live far from the school? I mean,how do you usually go to work?M:Well,mostly by car.But once in a while,I prefer to ride my bike.You know,I live quite far from the school,about 20 miles.And I have to spend about an hour riding to school.But it only takes me less than a quarter of an hour to drive my car,unless the traffic is very bad.W:I see.Does this happen often? I mean the bad traffic.M:Yes,sure! I often get stuck on the way,and the problem’s getting worse and worse.W:That’s all of my questions.Thank you very much.M:You are welcome.(Text 9)M: Customer service.Andney Grant speaking.How may I help you?W:I can’t believe this is happening.I called and or dered a 32?inch bag last Friday.But today I found that you sent me a 24?inch one.I was planning to use that bag during our vacation in Mexico,but it doesn’t seem possible any more because we will take off on Saturday.It’s only two days away.What am I suppo sed to do?M:I’m really sorry,madam. I’ll check right away.Would you please tell me your order number?W:It’s CE2938.M:Just a minute.I do apologize,madam.There did seem to be a mistake.I’ll have the correct size bag sent to you by overnight mail right away.It will arrive in time for your Saturday trip.Again Iapologize for any inconvenience caused by our mistake.I promise it won’t happen again.W:OK.Well,thank you.M:Thank you,madam,for choosing Linch mail.I hope you will have a wonderful vacation.(Text 10)I wasn’t too fond of the lecture classes of 400 students in my general course.Halfway through my second term when I was considering whether or not to come back in the fall,I went on the Internet and came across Americorp.Then I joined in an organization,and that’s what I did last school year.I worked on making roads,building a house,serving as a teacher’s assistant and working as a camp officer in several projects in South Carolina and Florida.It’s been a great experience,and I’ve almost learned more tha n what I could have in college since I didn’t really want to be at that school and wasn’t interested in my major anyway,I thought this was better for me.After 1,700 hours of service I received 4,750 dollars.I can use that to pay off the money I borrowed from the bank or for what is needed when I go back to school this fall at ColumbusState in Ohio.Classes are smaller there and I’ll be majoring in German education.After working with the kids,now I know,I want to be a teacher.1、Who is the man talking about now?A.His girlfriend.B.His sister.C.His mother.2、What are they talking about?A.A traffic accident.B.A fire.C.A crime.3、Where does the conversation most probably take place?A.At a bookshop.B.At a kitchen.C.At a bank.4、Who was injured?A.George.B.George’s wife.C.George’s wife’s father.5、What do we learn from the conversation?A.Tony could not continue the experiment.B.Tony finished the experiment last night.C.Tony will go on with his experiment.第二节(共15小题,每小题1分)听下面5段对话或独白。
英国文学期末考试题目
Part Ⅰ: Choose the relevant match from column B for each item in column A. (10%)Section Acolumn A column B(1)Charles Dickens A. Oliver Twist(2)D.H Lawrence B. The Forsyte Saga(3)Jonathan Swift C. The Jew of Malta(4)John Galsworthy D. Sons and Lovers(5)Christopher Marlowe E. A Modest ProposalSection Bcolumn A column B(1) Doctor Faustus A. Darcy(2) The Merchant of Venice B. Joseph Surface(3) The School for Scandal C. Portia(4) Pride and Prejudice D. Friday(5) Robinson Crusoe E. MephistophilisPart Ⅱ: Complete each of the following statements with a proper words or a phrase. (10%)1. The Canterbury Tales first time to use“”2.It is Spenser’s idealism, his love of beauty, and his exquisite melody that made him known as “______”.3. is a playwright & poet who is considered above all writers in the past and in the present time4. Pope is one of the first to introduce to England, for him the supreme value was order.5. The Pilgrim’s Progress is a religious, its purpose is to urge people to abide by Christian doctrines and seek salvation(拯救) through constant struggles with their own weaknesses and all kinds of social evils. Its predominant metaphor –life as a journey.6. The two major novelists of the Romantic period are Jane Austen and ______.7. William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Cole ridge & Robert Southey are “”.8. James Joyce’s novels and short stories are regarded as his great works, all of which have the same setting : ______.9. Love and are the major themes in Jane Austin’s novels.10. is the most outstanding stream-of-consciousness novelist in 20th century English literaturePart Ⅲ: Each of the following statements below is followed by four alternative answers. Choosethe one that would best complete the statement. (40%)1. which of the following is regarded as the most successful religious allegory in the English language.?A. The Pilgrim's ProgressB. Grace Abounding to the Chief of SinnersC. The Life and Death of Mr. BadmanD. The Holy War2. Shakespeare’s four great tragedies are: Hamlet, Othello, ______ and ___.A. King Lear…Romeo and JulietB. King Lear…MacbethC. King John…Julius CaesarD. King John…The Merchant of Venice3. it is generally regarded that keats's most important and mature poems are in the formOf____.A. elegyB. odeC. epicD. sonnet4. Francis bacon is best known for his ____which greatly influenced the development of this literary form.A. essaysB. poemsC. works D plays5. who is not the major figure of modernist movement?A. EliotB. JoyceC. Charles dickensD. Pound6. who is considered to be the best known English dramatist since Shakespeare?A . Oscar Wilde B. john Galsworthy C. W.B. Yeats D. George Bernard Shaw7. Of the following poets, which is not regarded as 'lake poets'?A. Samuel Taylor ColeridgeB. Robert Southy C .William words worth D. William Shakespeare8. Which of the following cannot describe 'Byronic hero'?A. proudB. mysteriousC. noble originD. progressive9. who is regarded as a 'worshipper of nature'.A. john KeatsB. William BlakeC. William WordsworthD. Jane Austen10. Thomas Gray’s“Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”once and for all established his fame as theleader of the ______ poetry.A. RomanticB. PastoralC. NeoclassicalD. Sentimental11. “If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?” isquoted from Shelley’s ______.A. The CloudB. Ode to LibertyC. Ode to the West WindD. To a Skylark12. According to the subjects, Wordsworth’s short poemscan be classified into two groups: poems about ______ and poems about ______.A. nature…love & friendshipB. nature…human lifeC. Scotland…love & friendshipD. Scotland…human life13. Which of the following is NOT James Joyce’s works?A. The Portrait of a LadyB. DublinersC. UlyssesD. Finnegans Wake14. As a leading Romanticist, Byron’s chief contributionis his creation of the “Byronic hero”, a ______.A. proud, strong-minded rebel under pressureB. proud, mysterious rebel of noble birthC. proud, selfish person with evil heartD. a proud, vindictive person without mercy15. In his works, ______ set out a full map and a large-scalecriticism of 19th century England, particularlyLondon.A. DickensB. HardyC. George EliotD. Walter Peter16. The name of Robert Browning is often associatedwith the term______.A. dramatic monologueB. transferred epitetC. blank verseD. free verse17. In Lawrence’s opinion, the______ is responsible for the unhealthy development of human personalities , the perversion of love and the failure of human fulfillment in marital relationships.A. the First World WarB. original sinC. Victorian conventionsD. mechanical civilization18. .__________is the pseudonym of Marry Ann Evans.A. Jane AustenB. George EliotC. T.S.EliotD. Anne Bronte19. .__________is regarded as the most prominent stream-of-consciousness novelist.A. James JoyceB. Virginia WoolfC. wrence D. E.M.Forster20. .__________, a collection of 15 short stories, is the first important work of James Joyce’s life long preoccupation with Dublin life.A. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young ManB. DublinersC.UlyssesD. Finnegans WakePart Ⅳ: Answer the following questions(40%)1. W hat are the reasons for Chaucer’s being honored as “the father of English poetry”?(10 points )2. What is dramatic monologue? (5 points)3.Daniel Defoe’s novel Robinson Crusoe was a great success partly beca use the protagonist was a real middle-class hero. Discuss Crusoe, the protagonist of the novel, as an embodiment of the rising middle-class virtues in the mid-eighteenth century England. (15points)4.Discuss briefly the character of Elizabeth, the heroine in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. (10 points )。
英国文学期末考试题目(英语专业必备)
英国文学期末考试题目(英语专业必备)country and her patronage of the arts led to a flourishing of literature。
including the works of William Shakespeare。
her Marlowe。
and Ben Jonson.一.中古英语时期XXX in the English language and is XXX of Anglo-Saxon literature。
It is also the oldest surviving epic in the English language。
During the medieval d。
XXX Chaucer。
one of the greatest English poets。
is known for his masterpiece。
The Canterbury Tales。
XXX.二.文艺复兴RenaissanceXXX Renaissance refers to the d een the 14th and mid-17th centuries。
It XXX to the modern world and began in Italy with the flourishing of painting。
sculpture。
and literature before spreading to the rest of Europe。
Humanism was the essence of the Renaissance。
emphasizing that man is the measure of all things。
This d was England's Golden XXX。
with Queen Elizabeth'spatronage of the arts leading to a flourishing of literature。
英国文学期末考试题目(英语专业必备)
一.中古英语时期♦Beowulf is the oldest poem in the English language, and the most important specimen (范例、典范)of Anglo-Saxon literature, and also the oldest surviving epic in the English language.♦The romance is a popular literary form in the medieval period(中世纪). It uses verse or prose to sing knightly adventures or other heroic deeds.♦Geoffrey Chaucer, one of the greatest English poets, whose masterpiece, The Canterbury Tales(《坎特伯雷故事集》),was one of the most important influences on the development of English literature.♦Chaucer is considered as the father of English poetry and the founder of English realism.二.文艺复兴Renaissance♦Renaissance refers to the period between the 14th and mid-17th centuries. It marks a transition(过渡) from the medieval to the modern world.♦It started in Italy with the flowering of painting, sculpture(雕塑)and literature, and then spread to the rest of Europe.♦Humanism is the essence of Renaissance -----Man is the measure of all things. ♦This was England’s Golden Age in literature. Queen Elizabeth reigned over the country in this period. The real mainstream of the English Renaissance is the Elizabethan drama. The most famous dramatists in the Renaissance England♦♦“Of Studies” is the most popular of Bacon’s 58 essays.♦Thomas More ——Utopia♦Edmund Spenser——The Faerie Queene相关练习♦ 1. Which is the oldest poem in the English language?♦ A. Utopia B. Faerie Queene♦ C. Beowulf D. Hamlet♦ 2. _____ is the father of English poetry.♦ A. Edmund Spenser B. William Shakespeare♦ C. Francis Bacon D. Geoffrey Chaucer♦ 3. ____ is not a playwright during the Renaissance period on England.♦ A. William Shakespeare B. Geoffrey Chaucer♦ C. Christopher Marlowe D. Ben Johnson三.莎士比亚William Shakespeare♦“All the world 's a stage, and all the men and women merely players.”——William Shakespeare♦William Shakespeare is considered the greatest playwright in the world and the finest poet who has written in the English language. Shakespeare understood people more than any other writers. He could create characters that havemeaning beyond the time and place of his plays. His four tragedies are Hamlet(《哈姆雷特》), Othello(《奥赛罗》), King Lear(《李尔王》) and Macbeth(《麦克白》).♦Shakespeare’s sonnets, 154 in number, are the only direct expression of the poet’s own feelings; Sonnet 18 deserves its fame because it is one of the most beautifully written verses in the English language♦诗选♦Sonnet 18♦Shall I compare thee to a Summer’s day?♦Thou art more lovely and more temperate.♦Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,♦And Summer’s lease hath all too short a date.♦(我怎能将你与夏日相比? /你比它更温和可爱:/动人的花蕾在五月咆哮的风中颤抖,/夏日的美好时光也绝不长久:)♦Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,♦And often is his gold complexion dimm’d;♦And every fair from fair sometime declines,♦By chance, or nature’s changing course, untrimm’d;♦(太阳的金色光芒虽然耀眼,/却常常以灰暗的面貌出现;/再美貌的物什都逃不过凋谢,/命运流转或无意间将其拆解;)♦But thy eternal Summer shall not fade,♦Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow’st♦Nor shall Death brag thou wander’st in his shade,♦When in eternal line to time thou grow’st.♦So long as men can breath or eyes can see,♦So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.♦(可你如夏日般不会褪色, /你的美貌也将永存; /死神无法夸耀你曾在它的阴影中游荡, /伴随永恒的诗篇你将留存。
英国文学期末考试题目
Section Bcolumn A column B(1) Doctor Faustus A. Darcy(2) The Merchant of Venice B. Joseph Surface(3) The School for Scandal C. Portia(4) Pride and Prejudice D. Friday(5) Robinson Crusoe E. MephistophilisPart Ⅱ: Complete each of the following statements with a proper words or a phrase. (10%)1. The Canter bury Tales first time to use“”is Spenser’s idealism, his love of beauty, and his exquisite melody that made him known as “______”.3. is a playwright & poet who is considered above all writers in the past and in the present time4. Pope is one of the first to introduce to England, for him the supreme value was order.5. The Pilgrim’s Progress is a religious, its purpose is to urge people to abide by Christian doctrines and seek salvation(拯救) through constant struggles with their own weaknesses and all kinds of social evils. Its predominant metaphor –life as a journey.6. The two major novelists of the Romantic period are Jane Austen and ______.7. William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge & Robert Southey are “”.8. James Joyce’s novels and short stories are regarded as his great works, all of which have the same setti ng: ______.9. Love and are the major themes in Jane Austin’s novels.10. is the most outstanding stream-of-consciousness novelist in 20th century English literaturePart Ⅲ: Each of the following statements below is followed by four alternative answers. Choosethe one that would best complete the statement. (40%)1. which of the following is regarded as the most successful religious allegory in the English language.?A. The Pilgrim's ProgressB. Grace Abounding to the Chief of SinnersC. The Life and Death of Mr. BadmanD. The Holy War2. Shakespeare’s four great tragedies are: Hamlet, Othello, ______ and ___.A. King Lear…Romeo and JulietB. King Lear…MacbethC. King John…Julius CaesarD. King John…The Merchant of Venice3. it is generally regarded that keats's most important and mature poems are in the formOf____.A. elegyB. odeC. epicD. sonnet4. Francis bacon is best known for his ____which greatly influenced the development of this literary form.A. essaysB. poemsC. works D plays5. who is not the major figure of modernist movement?A. EliotB. JoyceC. Charles dickensD. Pound6. who is considered to be the best known English dramatist since Shakespeare?A . Oscar Wilde B. john Galsworthy C. . Yeats D. George Bernard Shaw7. Of the following poets, which is not regarded as 'lake poets'?A. Samuel Taylor ColeridgeB. Robert Southy C .William words worth D. William Shakespeare8. Which of the following cannot describe 'Byronic hero'?A. proudB. mysteriousC. noble originD. progressive9. who is regarded as a 'worshipper of nature'.A. john KeatsB. William BlakeC. William WordsworthD. Jane Austen10. Thomas Gray’s“Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”once and for all established his fame as theleader of the ______ poetry.A. RomanticB. PastoralC. NeoclassicalD. Sentimental11. “If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind” isquoted from Shelley’s ______.A. The CloudB. Ode to LibertyC. Ode to the West WindD. To a Skylark12. According to the subjects, Wordsworth’s short poemscan be classified into two groups: poems about ______ and poems about ______.A. nature…love & friendshipB. nature…human lifeC. Scotland…love & friendshipD. Scotland…human life13. Which of the following is NOT James Joyce’s worksA. The Portrait of a LadyB. DublinersC. UlyssesD. Finnegans Wake14. As a leading Romanticist, Byron’s chief contributionis his creation of the “Byronic hero”, a ______.A. proud, strong-minded rebel under pressureB. proud, mysterious rebel of noble birthC. proud, selfish person with evil heartD. a proud, vindictive person without mercy15. In his works, ______ set out a full map and a large-scalecriticism of 19th century England, particularlyLondon.A. DickensB. HardyC. George EliotD. Walter Peter16. The name of Robert Browning is often associatedwith the term______.A. dramatic monologueB. transferred epitetC. blank verseD. free verse17. In Lawrence’s opinion, the______ is responsible for the unhealthy development of human personaliti es, the perversion of love and the failure of human fulfillment in marital relationships.A. the First World WarB. original sinC. Victorian conventionsD. mechanical civilization18. .__________is the pseudonym of Marry Ann Evans.A. Jane AustenB. George EliotC. D. Anne Bronte19. .__________is regarded as the most prominent stream-of-consciousness novelist.A. James JoyceB. Virginia WoolfC. D.20. .__________, a collection of 15 short stories, is the first important work of James Joyce’s life long preoccupation with Dublin life.A. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young ManB. DublinersD. Finnegans WakePart Ⅳ: Answer the following questions(40%)1. W hat are the reasons for Chaucer’s being honored as “the father of English poetry”(10 points )2. What is dramatic monologue (5 points)Defoe’s novel Robinson Crusoe was a great success partly because the protagonist was a real middle-class hero. Discuss Crusoe, the protagonist of the novel, as an embodiment of the rising middle-class virtues in the mid-eighteenth century England. (15points)briefly the character of Elizabeth, the heroine in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. (10 points )!。
英语文学导论期末考试试卷
一、选择题(每题2分,共20分)1. 以下哪位作家被誉为“英国文学之父”?A. William ShakespeareB. Geoffrey ChaucerC. Jane AustenD. Charles Dickens2. 以下哪部作品被认为是英国文学史上第一部小说?A. "The Canterbury Tales"B. "Pride and Prejudice"C. "Great Expectations"D. "Don Quixote"3. 在以下哪部作品中,作者通过描述一个虚构的岛屿来探讨社会、政治和人性问题?A. "Utopia"B. "The Tempest"C. "The Great Gatsby"D. "1984"4. 以下哪位作家是英国浪漫主义文学的代表人物之一?A. William WordsworthB. Emily BrontëC. Thomas HardyD. John Keats5. 以下哪部作品是英国维多利亚时期最著名的哥特式小说之一?A. "Dracula"B. "Jane Eyre"C. "Wuthering Heights"D. "Oliver Twist"6. 在以下哪部作品中,作者通过描绘一个小镇的生活来反映社会问题?A. "Wuthering Heights"B. "Great Expectations"C. "Middlemarch"D. "To Kill a Mockingbird"7. 以下哪位作家是20世纪英国文学的代表人物之一?A. Virginia WoolfB. James JoyceC. Aldous HuxleyD. D.H. Lawrence8. 在以下哪部作品中,作者通过描述一个家庭的悲剧来探讨爱与死亡的主题?A. "Wuthering Heights"B. "Madame Bovary"C. "The Great Gatsby"D. "The Catcher in the Rye"9. 以下哪位作家是20世纪美国文学的代表人物之一?A. F. Scott FitzgeraldB. Ernest HemingwayC. J.D. SalingerD. John Steinbeck10. 在以下哪部作品中,作者通过描述一个人物的内心世界来探讨孤独和自我认同的问题?A. "The Great Gatsby"B. "The Catcher in the Rye"C. "On the Road"D. "1984"二、填空题(每题2分,共20分)1. 《罗密欧与朱丽叶》是莎士比亚的______剧作。
英国文学期末考试题目
Part Ⅰ: Choose the relevant match from column B for each item in column A. (10%)Section Acolumn A column B(1)Charles Dickens A. Oliver Twist(2)D.H Lawrence B. The Forsyte Saga(3)Jonathan Swift C. The Jew of Malta(4)John Galsworthy D. Sons and Lovers(5)Christopher Marlowe E. A Modest ProposalSection Bcolumn A column B(1) Doctor Faustus A. Darcy(2) The Merchant of Venice B. Joseph Surface(3) The School for Scandal C. Portia(4) Pride and Prejudice D. Friday(5) Robinson Crusoe E. MephistophilisPart Ⅱ: Complete each of the following statements with a proper words or a phrase. (10%)1. The Canterbury Tales first time to use“”2.It is Spenser’s idealism, his love of beauty, and his exquisite melody that made him known as “______”.3. is a playwright & poet who is considered above all writers in the past and in the present time4. Pope is one of the first to introduce to England, for him the supreme value was order.5. The Pilgrim’s Progress is a religious, its purpose is to urge people to abide by Christian doctrines and seek salvation(拯救) through constant struggles with their own weaknesses and all kinds of social evils. Its predominant metaphor –life as a journey.6. The two major novelists of the Romantic period are Jane Austen and ______.7. William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge & Robert Southey are “”.8. James Joyce’s novels and short stories are regarded as his great works, all of which have the same setting : ______.9. Love and are the major themes in Jane Austin’s novels.10. is the most outstanding stream-of-consciousness novelist in 20th century English literaturePart Ⅲ: Each of the following statements below is followed by four alternative answers. Choosethe one that would best complete the statement. (40%)1. which of the following is regarded as the most successful religious allegory in the English language.?A. The Pilgrim's ProgressB. Grace Abounding to the Chief of SinnersC. The Life and Death of Mr. BadmanD. The Holy War2. Shakespeare’s four great tragedies are: Hamlet, Othello, ______ and ___.A. King Lear…Romeo and JulietB. King Lear…MacbethC. King John…Julius CaesarD. King John…The Merchant of Venice3. it is generally regarded that keats's most important and mature poems are in the formOf____.A. elegyB. odeC. epicD. sonnet4. Francis bacon is best known for his ____which greatly influenced the development of this literary form.A. essaysB. poemsC. works D plays5. who is not the major figure of modernist movement?A. EliotB. JoyceC. Charles dickensD. Pound6. who is considered to be the best known English dramatist since Shakespeare?A . Oscar Wilde B. john Galsworthy C. W.B. Yeats D. George Bernard Shaw7. Of the following poets, which is not regarded as 'lake poets'?A. Samuel Taylor ColeridgeB. Robert Southy C .William words worth D. William Shakespeare8. Which of the following cannot describe 'Byronic hero'?A. proudB. mysteriousC. noble originD. progressive9. who is regarded as a 'worshipper of nature'.A. john KeatsB. William BlakeC. William WordsworthD. Jane Austen10. Thomas Gray’s“Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”once and for all established his fame as theleader of the ______ poetry.A. RomanticB. PastoralC. NeoclassicalD. Sentimental11. “If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?” isquoted from Shelley’s ______.A. The CloudB. Ode to LibertyC. Ode to the West WindD. To a Skylark12. According to the subjects, Wordsworth’s short poemscan be classified into two groups: poems about ______ and poems about ______.A. nature…love & friendshipB. nature…human lifeC. Scotland…love & friendshipD. Scotland…human life13. Which of the following is NOT James Joyce’s works?A. The Portrait of a LadyB. DublinersC. UlyssesD. Finnegans Wake14. As a leading Romanticist, Byron’s chief contributionis his creation of the “Byronic hero”, a ______.A. proud, strong-minded rebel under pressureB. proud, mysterious rebel of noble birthC. proud, selfish person with evil heartD. a proud, vindictive person without mercy15. In his works, ______ set out a full map and a large-scalecriticism of 19th century England, particularlyLondon.A. DickensB. HardyC. George EliotD. Walter Peter16. The name of Robert Browning is often associatedwith the term______.A. dramatic monologueB. transferred epitetC. blank verseD. free verse17. In Lawrence’s opinion, the______ is responsible for the unhealthy development of human personalities , the perversion of love and the failure of human fulfillment in marital relationships.A. the First World WarB. original sinC. Victorian conventionsD. mechanical civilization18. .__________is the pseudonym of Marry Ann Evans.A. Jane AustenB. George EliotC. T.S.EliotD. Anne Bronte19. .__________is regarded as the most prominent stream-of-consciousness novelist.A. James JoyceB. Virginia WoolfC. wrence D. E.M.Forster20. .__________, a collection of 15 short stories, is the first important work of James Joyce’s life long preoccupation with Dublin life.A. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young ManB. DublinersC.UlyssesD. Finnegans WakePart Ⅳ: Answer the following questions(40%)1. W hat are the reasons for Chaucer’s being honored as “the father of English poetry”?(10 points )2. What is dramatic monologue? (5 points)3.Daniel Defoe’s novel Robinson Crusoe was a great success partly because the protagonist was a real middle-class hero. Discuss Crusoe, the protagonist of the novel, as an embodiment of the rising middle-class virtues in the mid-eighteenth century England. (15points)4.Discuss briefly the character of Elizabeth, the heroine in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. (10 points )。
英国文学期末考试试题
Part I Multiple Choice (30 points, 30×1)Directions: In this part of the test, there are thirty items. Choose the best answer and write the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet.1.Which of the following is NOT a feature of Beowulf?2. English Renaissance Period was an age of .3. The main literary form of the early 17th century was poetry. John Milton was acknowledgedas the greatest. Besides him, there were two groups of poets. They were the Cavalier poets and .4 .The greatest poet of the Middle English period is__________ ,the father of Englishpoetry.5. Which of the following can be said of the essence of the Renaissance?6. In Shakespeare’s greatest tragedies, which of the following is the typical characte ristic the heroes share in common?7. In the field of literature, the Enlightenment Movement brought about the tendency of _______8. “The curfew tolls the knell of parting day/ The lowing herd wind slowly o’er the lea” These lines are taken from ________.9. One of the distinct features of the Elizabethan time is __________.10. The Renaissance is actually a movement stimulated by a series of historical events,which one of the following is not such an event?11. Don Juan is written by __________.12. Heathcliff is character of the novel ____________.13. Which of the following works were not written by Defoe?14. Which of the following statements about Paradise Lost is true?15. The 18th-century England is known as ________16. ________ compiled The Dictionary of the English Language which became the foundation ofall the subsequent English dictionaries.17. English Romanticism began in 1798 with the publication of ________and ended in 1832with’s ________ death and the passage of the first Reform Bill.18. Which of the following statements about Paradise Lost is true? ________.19. Which of the following statements is true about John Keats’ poetry? ________.20. Jane Austen’s main literary concern is about the following except ________.21. What makes Jane Eyre one of the most popular and important novels of the Victorian Age arethe followings except ________.22. Which of the following groups is not written by Charles Dickens? ________.23. The name of Robert Browning is often associated with the term ________.24. In many of Hardy’s novels, the fate of the characters is always driven by ________.25. Murder in the Cathedral, with its purely dramatic power, remains the most popularof________ verse plays in spite of its primarily religious purpose.26. The overall style of Yeats’ early poetry is ________.27. Much of Bernard Shaw’s drama is constructed around the ________of a conventionaltheatrical situation. The device is an integral part of an interpretation of life.28. In her works, George Eliot is deeply concerned with the people and life of her time and tries topursue________.29. Which of the following brings LITTLE impact on the development of 20th century literature?________.30. In his novels, Lawrence made a bold psychological exploration of various human relationshipsand believed that ________.31. The sentence “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?” is the beginning line of one ofShakespeare’s ________.32. “And where are they? And where art thou,”My country? On thy voiceless shoreThe heroic lay is tuneless now-The heroic bosom beats no more!”(George Gordon Byron, Don Juan)In the above stanza, “art thou” literally means _______ .33. Which of the following can be said of the essence of the Renaissance? ________.34. The major concern of _______ fiction lies in the tracing of the psychological development ofhis characters and in his energetic criticism of the dehumanizing effect of the capitalist industrialization on human nature.35. Daniel Defoe describes _______ as a typical English Middle-class man of the eighteenthcentury, the very prototype of the empire builder or the pioneer colonist.36. _______ is a typical feature of Swift's writings.37. “Do you think, because I am poor, obscure, plain, and little, I am soulless and heartless?…Andif God had gifted me with some beauty, and much wealth, I should have made it as hard for you to leave me, as it is now for me to leave you.”The above quoted passage is most probably taken from _______ .39. The Pilgrim’s Pr ogress by John Bunyan is often said to be concerned with the search for_______ .40. Alexander Pope strongly advocated _______, emphasizing that literary works should bejudged by rules of order, reason, logic, restrained emotion, good taste and decorum.41. After reading the first chapter of Pride and Prejudice, we may come to know that Mrs. Bennetis a woman of _______ .42. Of all the eighteenth-century novelists, _______ was the first to set out, both in theory andpractice, to write specifically a “comic epic in prose,” and the first to give the modern novel its structure and style.43. In Hardy’s Wessex novels, there is an apparent _______ touch in his description of the simpleand beautiful though primitive rural life.44. We can perhaps describ e the west wind in Shelley’s poem “Ode to the West Wind” with allthe following terms except _______.45. In his novels, Lawrence made a bold psychological exploration of various human relationshipsand believed that ________.46. Literature of Neoclassicism is different from that of Romanticism in that ________.47. ________was composed in a dream after Coleridge took opium.48. Britain witnessed two major romantic poets in the latter half of the 18th century. They are________.49. Jane Austen’s main li terary concern is about the following except ________.50. What makes Jane Eyre one of the most popular and important novels of the Victorian Age arethe followings except ________.51. The name of Robert Browning is often associated with the term ________.52. The overall style of Yeats’ early poetry is ________.53. In her works, George Eliot is deeply concerned with the people and life of her time and tries topursue________.54. Which of the following brings LITTLE impact on the development of 20th century literature?________.55. In the last few decades of the 18th century, the neoclassicism was gradually replaced by________.Part II Match ( 10 points, 10×1)Directions: Choose the correct letters from the list of the authors for the following works and put them into the Table.A. Geoffrey ChaucerB. Henry FieldingC. Walter ScottD. George Gorden ByronE. William Makepeace ThackerayF. Thomas HardyG. James JoyceH. Charles DickensI. T. S. EliotJ. Oscar WildePart III TermsDirections: In this part of the test, there are five terms. Please give the definition for these terms. Scores will be given for the related contents. (20 points, 4x5)1. Epic2. Soliloquy3. Romanticism4. Realism5. Modernism6. Renaissance7. Classicism8.Romanticism 9. Stream of consciousness 10. Heroic coupletPart IV Appreciation(20 points 6, 7, 7)Directions: In this part of the test, there are three excerpts. Each of the excerpts is followed by several questions. Read the excerpts and answer the questions.Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice, William Wordsworth: I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud, William Shakespeare :Sonnet 18 William Blake:The Typer Robert Burns:A Red Red RosePART V COMMENT(20 points 1×20)Directions: Choose one of the following questions to write an ESSAY of at least 200 words. 1. Elizabeth Bennet, the heroine in Pride and Prejudice, is often regarded as the most successful character created by Jane Austen. Make a brief comment on Elizabeth’s character.2. Make a brief comment on Pride and Prejudice.。
英国文学期末考试试题广外
英国文学期末考试试题(广东外语外贸大学)Instructions:This examination consists of 5 parts,and the total time for the examination is 2 hours. All the answers should be entered onto the Answer Sheet.Part I:Multiple Choices (10%)Choose the best answer to the following sentences.1.Which of the following is NOT a feature of Beowulf?A. AlliterationB. Anglo-Saxons’ early life in EnglandC. Germanic languageD. The national epic of Anglo-Saxon people2.English Renaissance Period was an age of.A. prose and novelB. poetry and dramaC. essays and journalsD. ballads and songs3.The main literary form of the early 17th century was poetry. John Milton was acknowledged as the greatest. Besides him,there were two groups of poets. They were the Cavalier poets and.A. the lake poetsB. the university witsC. the Metaphysical poetsD. the Romantic poets4. Pamela is widely considered to be the first novel and was written by ___________.A. Thomas HardyB. James JoyceC. Samuel RichardsonD. Henry Fielding5.The publication of,which was the joint work of William Wordsworth and Samuel T. Coleridge,marked the beginning of the Romantic Age in England.A. Don JuanB. The Rime of the Ancient MarinerC. Lyrical BalladsD. Queen Mab6.Among the most famous realistic novelists of the Victorian age are,W. M. Thackeray,Bronte sisters,etc.A. Joseph ConradB. Henry FieldingC. Charles DickensD. D. H. Lawrence7.In James Joyce’s ____________ the story “Eveline” paints a portrait of a young woman from Dublin deciding whether or not to leave her hometown.A. UlyssesB. OrlandoC. DublinersD. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man8.In the 18th century England,satire was much used in writing. Literature of this age produced some excellent satirists,such as Jonathan Swift,Henry Fielding and.William Blake B. Robert Burns C.Alexander Pope D. Daniel Defoe9.William Wordsworth never used “gaudy and inane phraseology” because he felt that poetry should ____________.A. be read only by the well-educatedB. use difficult vocabulary to express complicated emotionsC. use simple speech to communicate the truths of human experienceD. rely on strange and uncommon words to bring people new experiences10. Virginia Woolf is renowned for adopting the technique,which displays the sequence of thoughts and impressions in a person’s mind.A. mind-readingB. third-person narrationC. stream-of-consciousnessD. feministPart II:Gap Filling (10%)Complete the following sentences and write your answers on the Answer Sheet.1.Geoffrey Chaucer’s work gives us a picture of the condition of English life of his day,such as its work and play,its deeds and dreams,its fun and sympathy.2.During the Norman Conquest,the most important form of literary composition is,the representative of which is the legend of King Arthur and the round table knights.3.Epoch of Renaissance witnessed a particular development of English drama. It was William Shakespeare and who made blank verse the principal vehicle of expression in drama.4.Hamlet,Othello,Macbeth and are generally regarded as William Shakespeare’s four great tragedies.5.Edmund Spenser is generally regarded as the greatest nondramatic poet of the Elizabethan Age. His fame is chiefly based on his masterpiece.6.In Elizabethan Period,wrote more than 50 excellent essays,which made him one of the best essayists in English literature.7.The was a progressive intellectual movement throughout western Europe in the 18th century.8.In the latter part of the 18th century,there appeared,as a reaction against Reason,___________ novel and literature of sentimentality.9.Thomas Gray’s highly praised poem shows the poet’s sympathy for the poor,and condemns the great ones who despise the poor and bring sufferings to the common people.10.The Romantic movement in England had two significant movements as its background:the French Revolution and.11________ is perhaps the most talented early novelist. She wrote a number of books concerning young,relatively wealthy women pursuing marriage,such as Pride and Prejudice and Emma.12.George Byron is chiefly known for his two long poems. One is Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage and the other is.13John Keats wrote several famous ___________, a type of lyric poem that is meditative and formal.14._________,the eldest of the two famous novelist sisters,wrote Jane Eyre in the middle of the 19th century.15._____________ monologue was first successfully used in poetry by Robert Browning.16.One of the most striking features of in the 20th century literature is anti-past,anti-tradition,anti-novel,anti-hero,etc.17.__________,the manifesto of modernist poetry in the 20th century,was written by T. S. Eliot.18. A Passage to India,Howard’s End,and A Room with a View are three of the most famous novels by ___________.19.Lord Jim is one of the most famous novels by _________,who was born in Poland and learned English as his third language.20.Man and Superman and Pygmalion are two of most famous plays by __________.Part III:Definition of Terms (15%)Choose THREE out of the following terms and explain them in two or three sentences.Sonnet;Point of view;Soliloquy;Setting;Heroic coupletPart IV:Appreciation (40%)Choose TWO of the following three excerpts and write a passage of comment (about 80 words)on each one. Your comment should cover the questions after each excerpt.Excerpt 1:I wandered lonely as a cloudThat floats on high o’er vales and hills,When all at once I saw a crowd,A host,of golden daffodils;Beside the lake,beneath the trees,Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.…For oft,when on my couch I lieIn vacant or in pensive mood,They flash upon that inward eyeWhich is the bliss of solitude;And then my heart with pleasure fills,And dances with the daffodils.(William Wordsworth,“I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud”)Questions:1. What is the central image of this poem?What is the poet’s reaction as revealed in the poem?2. Wordsworth believes that “All good poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings”and poetry “takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquility”. How does this poem reflect the poet’s philosophy of composition?Excerpt 2:The proper study of mankind is man.Placed on this isthmus of a middle state,A being darkly wise,and rudely great:With too much knowledge for the Skeptic side,With too much weakness for the Stoic’s pride,He hangs between;in doubt to act,or rest;In doubt to deem himself a God,or beast;In doubt his mind or body to prefer;Born but to die,and reasoning such,Whether he thinks too little or too much;Chaos of thought and passion,all confused;Still by himself abused or disabused;Created half to rise,and half to fall;(Alexander Pope,An Essay on Man)Questions:1. What’s the topic of the above lines?2.Summarize the main idea in a few sentences.Excerpt 3:I shall now therefore humbly propose my own thoughts,which I hope will not be liable to the least objection.I have been assured by a very knowing American of my acquaintance in London,that a young healthy child well nursed is at a year old a most delicious,nourishing,and wholesomefood,whether stewed,roasted,baked,or boiled;and I make no doubt that it will equally serve in a fricassee or a ragout.I do therefore humbly offer it to public consideration that of the hundred and twenty thousand children,already computed,twenty thousand may be reserved for breed,whereof only one fourth part to be males,which is more than we allow to sheep,black cattle,or swine;and my reason is that these children are seldom the fruits of marriage,a circumstance not much regarded by our savages,therefore one male will be sufficient to serve four females. That the remaining hundred thousand may at a year old be offered in sale to the person of quality and fortune through the kingdom,always advising the mother to let them suck plentifully in the last month,so as to render them plump and fat for a good table.A child will make two dishes at an entertainment for friends,and when the family dines alone,the fore or hind quarter will make a reasonable dish;and seasoned with a little pepper or salt will be very good boiled on the fourth day,especially in winter.(Jonathan Swift,A Modest Proposal)Questions:1. What is the author’s modest proposal in the passage?And what do you think is his real idea behind it?2. What kind of tone is shown in the passage?(Explain it with specific quotations from the text)Part V. Critical Reading (25%)Read the attached short story and answer the questions in essay form.1. What’s the turning point in the murder trial?Describe it in a few sentences.2.Read carefully the last two paragraphs of the story and comment,in the form of a 150-200-word essay,on the message or real meaning of the author.The Case for the DefenseGraham Greene1It was the strangest murder trial that I ever attended. They named it the Peckham murder in the headlines,though Northwood Street,where the old woman was found battered to death,was not strictly speaking in Peckham. This was not one of those cases of circumstantial evidence in which you feel the juryman’s anxiety—because mistakes havebeen made—like domes of silence muting the court. No,this murderer was all but found with the body;no one present when the Crown counsel outlined his case believed that the man in the dock stood any chance at all.2He was a heavy stout man with bulging bloodshot eyes. All his muscles seemed to be in his thighs. Yes,an ugly customer,one you wouldn’t forget in a hurry—and that was an important point because the Crown proposed to call four witnesses who hadn’t forgotten him,who had seen him hurrying away from the little red villa in Northwood Street. The clock had just struck two in the morning.3Mrs. Salmon in 15 Northwood Street had been unable to sleep;she heard a door click shut and thought it was her own gate. So she went to the window and saw Adams (that was his name)on the steps of Mrs. Parker’s house. He had just come out and h e was wearing gloves. He had a hammer in his hand and she saw him drop it into the laurel bushes at the front gate. But before he moved away,he had looked up—at her window. The fatal instinct that tells a man when he is watched exposed him in the light of a street-lamp to her gaze—his eyes suffused with horrifying and brutal fear,like an animal’s when you raise a whip. I talked afterwards to Mrs. Salmon,who naturally after the astonishing verdict went in fear herself. As I imagined did all the witnesses—Henry MacDougall,who had been driving home from Benfleet late and nearly ran Adams down at the corner of Northwood Street. Adams was walking in the middle of the road looking dazed. And old Mr. Wheeler,who lived next door to Mrs. Parker,at No. 12 and was waken by a noise—like a chair falling—through the thin-as-paper villa wall,and got up and looked out of the window,just as Mrs. Salmon had done,saw Adam’s back and,as he turned,those bulging eyes. In Laurel Avenue he had been seen by yet another witness—his luck was badly out;he might as well have committed the crime in broad daylight.4“I understand,” the counsel said,“that the defense proposes to plead mistaken identity. Adams’ wife will tell you that he was with her at two in the morning on F ebruary 14,but after you have heard the witnesses for the Crown and examined carefully the features of the prisoner,I do not think you will be prepared to admit the possibility of a mistake.”5It was all over,you would have said,but the hanging.6After the formal evidence had been given by the policeman who had found the body and the surgeon who examined it,Mrs. Salmon was called. She was the ideal witness,with her slight Scotch accent and her expression of honesty,care and kindness.7The counsel for the Crown brought the story gently out. She spoke very firmly. There was no malice in her,and no sense of importance at standing there in the Central Criminal Court with a judge in scarlet handing on her words and the reporters writing them down. Yes,she said,and then she had gone down stairs and rung up the police station.8“And do you see the man here in court?”She looked straight and at the big man in the dock,who stared at her with his Pekingese eyes without emotion.“Yes,” she sai d,“there he is.”“You are quite certain?”She said simply,“I couldn’t be mistaken,sir.”It was as easy as that.“Thank you,Mrs. Salmon.”9Counsel for the defense rose to cross-examine. If you had reported as many murder trials as I have,you would have known beforehand what line he would take. And I was right,up to a point.10“Now,Mrs. Salmon,you must have remembered that a man’s life may depend on your evidence.”“I do remember it,sir.”“Is your eyesight good?”“I have never had to wear spectacles,sir.”“You are a woman of fifty-five?”“Fifty-six,sir.”“And the man you saw was on the other side of the road?”“Yes,sir.”“And it was two o’clock in the morning. You must have remarkable eyes,Mrs. Salmon?”“No,sir. There was moonlight,and the man looked up,he had the lamplight on his face.”11I couldn’t make out what he was at. He couldn’t have expected any other answer than the one he got.12“None whatever,sir. It isn’t a face one forgets.”13Counsel took a look around the court for a moment. Then he said,“Do you mind,Mrs. Salmon,examining again the people in court?No,not the prisoner. Stand up,please,Mr. Adams,” and there at the back of the court with thick stout body and muscular legs and a pair of bulging eyes,was the exact image of the man in the dock. He was even dressed the same—tight blue suit and striped tie.14“Now think very carefully,Mrs. Salmon. Can you still swear that the man you saw drop the hammer in Mrs. Parker’s garden was the p risoner—and not this man,who is his twin brother?”15Of course she couldn’t. She looked from one to the other and didn’t say a word.16There the big brute sat in the dock with his legs crossed,and there he stood too at the back of the court and they both stared at Mrs. Salmon. She shook her head.17What we saw then was the end of the case. There wasn’t a witness prepared to swear that it was the prisoner he’d seen. And the brother?He had his own alibi too;he was with his wife.18And so the man was acquitted for lack of evidence. But whether if he did the murder and not his brother—he was punished or not,I don’t know. That extraordinary day had an extraordinary end. I followed Mrs. Salmon out of court and we got wedged in the crowd who were waiting,of course,for the twins. The police tried to drive the crowd away,but all they could do was keep the roadway clear for traffic. I learned later that they tried to get the twins to leave by a back way,but they wouldn’t. One of them—no one knew which—said,“I’ve been acquitted,haven’t I?” and they walked bang out of the front entrance. Then it happened. I don’t know how,though I was only six feet away. The crowd moved and somehow one of the twins got pushed on to the road right in front of a bus.19He gave a squeal like a rabbit and that was all;he was dead,his skull smashed just as Mrs. Parker’s had been. Divine vengeance?I wish I knew. There was the other Adams getting on his feet from beside the body and looking straight over at Mrs. Salmon. He wascrying,but whether he was the murderer or the innocent man nobody will ever be able to tell. But if you were Mrs. Salmon,could you sleep at night?。
EnglishLiterature英国文学期末考试卷
英国文学考试复习题:Part I.1. Geoffrey Chaucer is the founder of English ________.A. PoetryB. DramaC. NovelD. Prose2. Percy Bysshe Shelley was a famous __________ poet.A. NaturalistB. RealistC. RomanticistD. Classicist3. Beowulf is the national ________ of Britain.A. balladB. epicC. romanceD. sonnet4. Wuthering Heights is ______________ 's masterpiece.A. Jane AustenB. Emily Bronte C Anne Bronte B George Eliot5. The English Renaissance began in the_____.A. 14th centuryB. 15th centuryC. 16th centuryD. 17th century6. The English Renaissance began during the reign of_____.A. Elizabeth IB. James IC. Henry VIIID. Charles II7. A stanza of nine lines, with the first eight lines in iambic pentameter and the last line in iambic hexameter, rhyming ababbcbcc ic called_____.A. Shakespearean SonnetB. Petrarchan SonnetC. Spenserian StanzaD. Blank V erse8. Marlowe’s Dr. Faustus is a play based on a(n)_____legend.A. GermanB. EnglishC. IrishD. Italian9_____is not Shakespeare’s work.A. HamletB. King LearC. OthelloD. The Faerie Queene10. The Four Greatest Tragedies of Shakespeare’s do not include:A. Romeo and JulietB. HamletC. MacbethD. Othello11._____is not a Metaphysical poet.A. John DonneB. MarloweC. HerbertD. Marvell12._____is not written by John MiltonA. Paradise LostB. Paradise RegainedC. Samson AgonistesD. Beowulf13. “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?” is the beginning line of one of Shakespeare’s_____.A. songB. tragedyC. sonnetD. comedy14. English Renaissance Period was an age of_____.A. ballads and songsB. prose and novelsC. essays and journalsD. poetry and drama15. Ode to the Grecian Urn is written by _________ .A. John KeatsB. Walter ScottC. ByronD. Shelley16.Tess of the D’Urbervilles is written by ___________ .A. Charles DickensB. George EliotC. Thomas HardyD. William Thackeray17. Walter Scott has been universally regarded as the founder and great master of _____________.A. the historical novelB. The realistic novelC. the scientific novelD. The gothic novel18. In which poem did Shelley write the following lines: The trumpet of a prophecy! O wind, / If winter comes, can spring be far behind?A. OzymandiasB. A Song: Men of EnglandC. Ode to the West WindD. Queen Mab19. What works of the following were NOT written by Byron?A. Don JuanB. Childe Harold PilgrimageC. CainD. Waverley20. Which of the following poems was written by William Wordsworth?A. The Faerie QueenB. Venus and AdonisC. The PreludeD. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner21. Which of the following poets does not belong to the Lake Poets?A. WordsworthB. SoutheyC. ColeridgeD. Keats22. Which of the following novels, written by Charles Dickens, shows the life experience of the author's youth?A. Great ExpectationB. Hard TimesC. David CopperfieldD. Edwin Drood23. Which of the following plays is not the greatest tragedies of Shakespeare?A. King LearB. Twelfth NightC. MacbethD. Othello24. From the following, choose the poem written by William Blake.A. A Red, Red RoseB. The TigerC. Get Up and Bar the DoorD. I Wander Lonely as a Cloud25. The writer of Utopia is _________ .A. Francis BaconB. Thomas WyattC. Thomas MoreD. Philip Sidney26 Along with the fast economic development in the 18th century in England, the British _____ also grew very rapidly.A. bourgeoisB. proletariansC. aristocratic classD. royal family27. The Enlightenment Movement did not advocate_____.A. rationality, reason, order and rulesB. return to the ancient classical worksC. inner feelings of individualsD. universal education28._____is not written by Alexander Pope.A. An Essay on CriticismB. The EssaysC. An Essay on ManD. The Dunciad29. An Essay on Criticism is a didactic poem written in_____.A. heroic coupletsB. English sonnetC. bland verseD. Italian sonnet30._____by Pope is a comprehensive study of the theories of literary criticism, exerting great influence upon his contemporary writers in advocating the classical rules and popularizing the neoclassicist tradition in England.A. An Essay on ManB. The DunciadC. The EssaysD. An Essay on Criticism31. In Robinson Crusoe, Defoe eulogizes the hero of the_____.A. aristocratic classB. enterprising landlordC .rising bourgeoisie D. hard-working people32. The tone of Jonathan Swift’s novel Gulliver’s Travel is_____.A. sadB. sarcasticC. praisingD. detached33._____has been regarded as “Father of English Novel.”A. Daniel DefoeB. Henry FieldingC. Jonathan SwiftD. Samuel Richardson34. The _____ Period has been generally regarded as one of the most glorious in the English history, producing the literary giants such as Charles Dickens.A. RenaissanceB. NeoclassicalC. RomanticD. Victorian35. The School for Scandal was written by_____.A. Thomas GrayB. Samuel JohnsonC. Richard B. SheridanD. Daniel Defoe36. _____ is not Thomas Hardy’s work.A. The Mill on the FlossB. Tess of the D’UrbervillesC. Jude the ObscureD. The Mayor of Casterbridge37. “My Last Duchess” is _____.A. a dramatic monologueB. a short lyricC. a novelD. an essay38. Tennyson’s “Ulysses” gets its inspiration from the following works or writers except_____.A. Homer’s OdesseyB. Joyce’s UlyssesC. DanteD. Greek Mythology39. In the 19th century English literature, a new literary trend _____ appeared. And it flourished in the 1840s and in the early 1950s.A. romanticismB. naturalismC. realismD. critical realism40. The title of the novel Vanity Fair was taken from_____.A. The Pilgrim’s ProgressB. Childe Ha rold’s PilgrimageC. Gulliver’s TravelsD. The Canterbury Tales41.The rhyming scheme adopted in the English epic Beowulf is _________.A) consonant B) assonant C) heroic couplet D) Alliteration42.The theme of Beowulf is manifested in the spirit of ___________.A) Heroism B) Romanticism C) Fatalism D) Determinism42. Beowulf is the national ________ of Britain.A. balladB. epicC. romanceD. sonnet43. The English Renaissance began during the reign of_____.A. Elizabeth IB. James IC. Henry VIIID. Charles II44. A stanza of nine lines, with the first eight lines in iambic pentameter and the last line in iambic hexameter, rhyming ababbcbcc is called_____.A. Shakespearean SonnetB. Petrarchan SonnetC. Spenserian StanzaD. Blank V erse45. Marlowe’s Dr. Faustus is a play based on a(n)_____legend.A. GermanB. EnglishC. IrishD. Italian46._____is not Shakespeare’s work.A. HamletB. King LearC. OthelloD. T he Faerie Queene47. The Four Greatest Tragedies of Shakespeare’s do not include:A. Romeo and JulietB. HamletC. MacbethD. Othello48._____is not a Metaphysical poet.A. John DonneB. MarloweC. HerbertD. Marvell49._____is not written by John MiltonA. Paradise LostB. Paradise RegainedC. Samson AgonistesD. Beowulf50. “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?” is the beginning line of one of Shakespeare’s_____.A. songB. tragedyC. sonnetD. comedy51. Which of the following poems was written by William Wordsworth?A. The Faerie QueenB. Venus and AdonisC. The PreludeD. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner52. Which of the following poets does not belong to the Lake Poets?A. WordsworthB. SoutheyC. ColeridgeD. Keats53. Which of the following novels, written by Charles Dickens, shows the life experience of the author's youth?A. Great ExpectationB. Hard TimesC. David CopperfieldD. The Tale of Two Cities54. Except being a victory of England over ______, the rout of the fleet “Armada”(Invincible) was also the triumph of the rising young bourgeoie over the declining old feudalism.A. SpainB. FranceC. AmericaD. Germany55. From the following, choose the poem written by William Blake.A. A Red, Red RoseB. The TigerC. Get Up and Bar the DoorD. I Wander Lonely as a Cloud56. The writer of Utopia is _________ .A. Francis BaconB. Thomas WyattC. Thomas MoreD. Philip Sidney57 Along with the fast economic development in the 18th century in England, the British _____ also grew very rapidly.A. bourgeoisB. proletariansC. aristocratic classD. royal family58. The Enlightenment Movement did not advocate_____.A. rationality, reason, order and rulesB. return to the ancient classical worksC. inner feelings of individualsD. universal education59. English Renaissance was not an age of prose, but Francis Bacon wrote his famous prose work ___________ ..A. An Essay on CriticismB. The EssaysC. An Essay on ManD. The Dunciad60. An Essay on Criticism is a didactic poem written in_____.A. heroic coupletsB. English sonnetC. bland verseD. Italian sonnetPart II:1. The lyric poem:2. Elegy:3. Ballad:4. Romances:5."Stream of Consciousness":6. Blank verse:7. Sonnet:8. Byronic Hero:9. Alliteration:10. Heroic Couplet:11. Chivalry12. Farce13.Spenserian stanza14. Soliloquy15.Conceit16. Epic:17. Minstrel:18. miracle play19. Stanza20. SatirePart V.I. Write a 200-word essay about Charles Dickens’ no vel, Oliver Twist: 30%1. Who is the hero of the novel? How well does he live his life?2. Why does Dickens end his novel with the final happiness of Oliver Twist?3. Who are responsible for his misfortune?4. Do you think Oliver Twist lives in modern city today?5. Why did Dickens often take children as main characters to describe the society? II. Write a 200-word essay about Jane Austen’s novel, Pride and Prejudice: 30% 1. Discuss the importance of social class in the novel, especially as it impacts the relationship between Elizabeth and Darcy.2. Analyze how Austen depicts Mr. Bennet. Is he a positive or negative figure?3. Pride and Prejudice is a novel about women who feel they have to marry to be happy. Taking Charlotte Lucas as an example, do you think the author is making a social criticism of her era’s view of marriage?4. Giving special attention to Wickham, Charlotte Lucas, and Elizabeth, compare and contrast male and female attitudes toward marriage in the novel.5. Discuss the relationship between Mrs. Bennet and her children, especially Elizabeth and LydiaIII. Write a 200-word essay about Daniel Defoe’ novel, Robinson Crusoe: 30%1. What are the personal characters of Robinson Crusoe?2. How does Robinson Crusoe set up a new society on the island?3. What example does he set for the later colonists?4. What are the language features in Robinson Crusoe?(Analyzing plot, characterization, theme and language)。
英国文学期末考试题目
Part Ⅰ: Choose the relevant match from column B for each item in column A. (10%)Section Acolumn A column B(1)Charles Dickens A. Oliver Twist(2)D.H Lawrence B. The Forsyte Saga(3)Jonathan Swift C. The Jew of Malta(4)John Galsworthy D. Sons and Lovers(5)Christopher Marlowe E. A Modest ProposalSection Bcolumn A column B(1) Doctor Faustus A. Darcy(2) The Merchant of Venice B. Joseph Surface(3) The School for Scandal C. Portia(4) Pride and Prejudice D. Friday(5) Robinson Crusoe E. MephistophilisPart Ⅱ: Complete each of the following statements with a proper words or a phrase. (10%)1. The Canterbury Tales first time to use“〞2.It is Spenser’s idealism, his love of beauty, and his exquisite melody that made him known as “______〞.3. is a playwright & poet who is considered above all writers in the past and in the present time4. Pope is one of the first to introduce to England, for him the supreme value was order.5. The Pilgrim’s Progress is a religious, its purpose is to urge people to abide by Christian doctrines and seek salvation(拯救) through constant struggles with their own weaknesses and all kinds of social evils. Its predominant metaphor –life as a journey.6. The two major novelists of the Romantic period are Jane Austen and ______.7. William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge & Robert Southey are “〞.8. James Joyce’s novels and short stories are regarded as his great works, all of which have the same setting : ______.9. Love and are the major themes in Jane Austin’s novels.10. is the most outstanding stream-of-consciousness novelist in 20th century English literaturePart Ⅲ: Each of the following statements below is followed by four alternative answers. Choosethe one that would best complete the statement. (40%)1. which of the following is regarded as the most successful religious allegory in the English language.?A. The Pilgrim's ProgressB. Grace Abounding to the Chief of SinnersC. The Life and Death of Mr. BadmanD. The Holy War2. Shakespeare’s four great tragedies are: Hamlet, Othello, ______ and ___.A. King Lear…Romeo and JulietB. King Lear…MacbethC. King John…Julius CaesarD. King John…The Merchant of Venice3. it is generally regarded that keats's most important and mature poems are in the formOf____.A. elegyB. odeC. epicD. sonnet4. Francis bacon is best known for his ____which greatly influenced the development of this literary form.A. essaysB. poemsC. works D plays5. who is not the major figure of modernist movement?A. EliotB. JoyceC. Charles dickensD. Pound6. who is considered to be the best known English dramatist since Shakespeare?A . Oscar Wilde B. john Galsworthy C. W.B. Yeats D. George Bernard Shaw7. Of the following poets, which is not regarded as 'lake poets'?A. Samuel Taylor ColeridgeB. Robert Southy C .William words worth D. William Shakespeare8. Which of the following cannot describe 'Byronic hero'?A. proudB. mysteriousC. noble originD. progressive9. who is regarded as a 'worshipper of nature'.A. john KeatsB. William BlakeC. William WordsworthD. Jane Austen10. Thomas Gray’s“Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard〞once and for all established his fame as theleader of the ______ poetry.A. RomanticB. PastoralC. NeoclassicalD. Sentimental11. “If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?〞 isquoted from Shelley’s ______.A. The CloudB. Ode to LibertyC. Ode to the West WindD. To a Skylark12. According to the subjects, Wordsworth’s short poemscan be classified into two groups: poems about ______ and poems about ______.A. nature…love & friendshipB. n ature…human lifeC. Scotland…love & friendshipD. Scotland…human life13. Which of the following is NOT James Joyce’s works?A. The Portrait of a LadyB. DublinersC. UlyssesD. Finnegans Wake14. As a leading Romanticist, Byron’s chief contributionis his creation of the “Byronic hero〞, a ______.A. proud, strong-minded rebel under pressureB. proud, mysterious rebel of noble birthC. proud, selfish person with evil heartD. a proud, vindictive person without mercy15. In his works, ______ set out a full map and a large-scalecriticism of 19th century England, particularlyLondon.A. DickensB. HardyC. George EliotD. Walter Peter16. The name of Robert Browning is often associatedwith the term______.A. dramatic monologueB. transferred epitetC. blank verseD. free verse17. In Lawrence’s opinion, the______ is responsible for the unhealthy development of human personalities , the perversion of love and the failure of human fulfillment in marital relationships.A. the First World WarB. original sinC. Victorian conventionsD. mechanical civilization18. .__________is the pseudonym of Marry Ann Evans.A. Jane AustenB. George EliotC. T.S.EliotD. Anne Bronte19. .__________is regarded as the most prominent stream-of-consciousness novelist.A. James JoyceB. Virginia WoolfC. wrence D. E.M.Forster20. .__________, a collection of 15 short stories, is the first important work of James Joyce’s life long preoccupation with Dublin life.A. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young ManB. DublinersC.UlyssesD. Finnegans WakePart Ⅳ: Answer the following questions(40%)1. What are the reasons for Chaucer’s being honored as “the father of English poetry〞?(10 points )2. What is dramatic monologue? (5 points)3.Daniel Defoe’s novel Robinson Crusoe was a great success partly because the protagonist was a real middle-class hero. Discuss Crusoe, the protagonist of the novel, as an embodiment of the rising middle-class virtues in the mid-eighteenth century England. (15points)4.Discuss briefly the character of Elizabeth, the heroine in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. (10 points )。
英国文学期末考试题目
Part Ⅰ: Choose the relevant match from column B for each item in column A。
(10%)Section Acolumn A column B(1)Charles Dickens A. Oliver Twist(2)D.H Lawrence B。
The Forsyte Saga(3)Jonathan Swift C。
The Jew of Malta(4)John Galsworthy D。
Sons and Lovers(5)Christopher Marlowe E。
A Modest ProposalSection Bcolumn A column B(1) Doctor Faustus A. Darcy(2) The Merchant of Venice B。
Joseph Surface(3)The School for Scandal C。
Portia(4)Pride and Prejudice D. Friday(5)Robinson Crusoe E. MephistophilisPart Ⅱ: Complete each of the following statements with a proper words or a phrase。
(10%)1. The Canterbury Tales first time to use“"2。
It is Spenser's idealism, his love of beauty, and his exquisite melody that made him known as “______”。
3. is a playwright & poet who is considered above all writers in the past and in the present time 4。
英国文学期末考试题目
Part Ⅰ: Choose the relevant match from column B for each item in column A. (10%)Section Acolumn A column B(1)Charles Dickens A。
Oliver Twist(2)D.H Lawrence B. The Forsyte Saga(3)Jonathan Swift C. The Jew of Malta(4)John Galsworthy D。
Sons and Lovers(5)Christopher Marlowe E。
A Modest ProposalSection Bcolumn A column B(1) Doctor Faustus A。
Darcy(2) The Merchant of Venice B。
Joseph Surface(3) The School for Scandal C。
Portia(4)Pride and Prejudice D。
Friday(5)Robinson Crusoe E. MephistophilisPart Ⅱ: Complete each of the following statements with a proper words or a phrase。
(10%)1。
The Canterbury Tales first time to use“”2。
It is Spenser’s idealism, his love of beauty, and his exquisite melody that made him known as “______". 3。
is a playwright & poet who is considered above all writers in the past and in the present time 4。
英国文学期末考试题目
Part Ⅰ:Choose the relevant match from column B for each itemin column A. (10%)Section Acolumn A column B(1)Charles Dickens A. Oliver Twist(2) Lawrence B. The Forsyte Saga(3)Jonathan Swift C. The Jew of Malta(4)John Galsworthy D. Sons and Lovers(5)Christopher Marlowe E. A Modest ProposalSection Bcolumn A column B(1) Doctor Faustus A. Darcy(2) The Merchant of Venice B. Joseph Surface(3) The School for Scandal C. Portia(4) Pride and Prejudice D. Friday(5) Robinson Crusoe E. MephistophilisPart Ⅱ:Complete each of the following statements with a proper words ora phrase. (10%)1. The Canterbury Tales first time to use“”is Spenser’s idealism, his love of beauty, and his exquisite melody th at made him known as “______”.3. is a playwright & poet who is considered above all writers in the past and in the present time4. Pope is one of the first to introduce to England, for him the supreme value was order.5. The Pilgrim’s Progress is a religious , its purpose is to urge people to abide by Christian doctrines and seek salvation(拯救) through constant struggles with their own weaknesses and all kinds of social evils. Its predominant metaphor –life as a journey.6.The two major novelists of the Romantic period are Jane Austen and ______.7. William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge & Robert Southey are “”.8. James Joyce’s novels and short stories are regarded as his great works , all of which have the same setting: ______.9. Love and are the major themes in Jane Austin’s novels.10. is the most outstanding stream-of-consciousness novelist in 20th century English literaturePart Ⅲ:Each of the following statements below is followed by four alt ernative answers. Choosethe one that would best complete the statement. (40%)1. which of the following is regarded as the most successful religious allegory in the English language.?A. The Pilgrim's ProgressB. Grace Abounding to the Chief of SinnersC. The Life and Death of Mr. BadmanD. The Holy War2. Shakespeare’s four great tragedies are: Hamlet, Othello, ______ and ___.A. King Lear…Romeo and JulietB. King Lear…MacbethC. King John…Ju lius CaesarD. King John…The Merchant of Venice3. it is generally regarded that keats's most important and mature poems are in the form Of____.A. elegyB. odeC. epicD. sonnet4. Francis bacon is best known for his ____which greatly influenced the development of this literary form.A. essaysB. poemsC. works D plays5. who is not the major figure of modernist movement?A. EliotB. JoyceC. Charles dickensD. Pound6. who is considered to be the best known English dramatist since Shakespeare?A . Oscar Wilde B. john Galsworthy C. . Yeats D. George Bernard Shaw7. Of the following poets, which is not regarded as 'lake poets'?A. Samuel Taylor ColeridgeB. Robert Southy C .William words worth D. William Shakespeare8. Which of the following cannot describe 'Byronic hero'?A. proudB. mysteriousC. noble originD. progressive9. who is regarded as a 'worshipper of nature'.A. john KeatsB. William BlakeC. William WordsworthD. Jane Austen10. Thomas Gray’s“Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”once and for all established his fame as theleader of the ______ poetry.A. RomanticB. PastoralC. NeoclassicalD. Sentimental11. “If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?”isquoted from Shelley’s______.A. The CloudB. Ode to LibertyC. Ode to the West WindD. To a Skylark12. According to the subjects, Wordsworth’s short poemscan be classified into two groups: poems about ______ and poems about _ _____.A. nature…love& friendshipB. nature…huma n lifeC. Scotland…love& friendshipD. Scotland…human life13. Which of the following is NOT James Joyce’s works?A. The Portrait of a LadyB. DublinersC. UlyssesD. Finnegans Wake14. As a leading Romanticist, Byron’s chief contributionis his creation of the “Byronic hero”, a ______.A. proud, strong-minded rebel under pressureB. proud, mysterious rebel of noble birthC. proud, selfish person with evil heartD. a proud, vindictive person without mercy15. In his works, ______ set out a full map and a large-scalecriticism of 19th century England, particularlyLondon.A. DickensB. HardyC. George EliotD. Walter Peter16. The name of Robert Browning is often associatedwith the term______.A. dramatic monologueB. transferred epitetC. blank verseD. free verse17. In Lawrence’s opinion, the______ is responsible for the unhealthy dev elopment of human personalities, the perversion of love and the failure of human fulfillment in marital relationships.A. the First World WarB. original sinC. Victorian conventionsD. mechanical civilization18. .__________is the pseudonym of Marry Ann Evans.A. Jane AustenB. George EliotC. D. Anne Bronte19. .__________is regarded as the most prominent stream-of-consciousness novelist.A. James JoyceB. Virginia WoolfC. D.20. .__________, a collection of 15 short stories, is the firstimportant work of James Joyce’s life longpreoccupation with Dublin life.A. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young ManB. DublinersD. Finnegans WakePart Ⅳ:Answer the following questions(40%)1. W hat are the reasons for Chaucer’s being honored as “the father of English poetry”?(10 points )2. What is dramatic monologue? (5 points)Defoe’s novel Robinson Crusoe was a great success partly because the protagonist was a real middle-class hero. Discuss Crusoe, the protagonist of the novel, as an embodiment of the rising middle-class virtues in the mid-eighteenth century England. (15points)briefly the character of Elizabeth, the heroine in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.(10 points )。
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英国文学期末考试试题(广东外语外贸大学)Instructions:This examination consists of 5 parts,and the total time for the examination is 2 hours. All the answers should be entered onto the Answer Sheet.Part I:Multiple Choices (10%)Choose the best answer to the following sentences.1.Which of the following is NOT a feature of Beowulf?A. AlliterationB. Anglo-Saxons’ early life in EnglandC. Germanic languageD. The national epic of Anglo-Saxon people2.English Renaissance Period was an age of.A. prose and novelB. poetry and dramaC. essays and journalsD. ballads and songs3.The main literary form of the early 17th century was poetry. John Milton was acknowledged as the greatest. Besides him,there were two groups of poets. They were the Cavalier poets and.A. the lake poetsB. the university witsC. the Metaphysical poetsD. the Romantic poets4. Pamela is widely considered to be the first novel and was written by ___________.A. Thomas HardyB. James JoyceC. Samuel RichardsonD. Henry Fielding5.The publication of,which was the joint work of William Wordsworth and Samuel T. Coleridge,marked the beginning of the Romantic Age in England.A. Don JuanB. The Rime of the Ancient MarinerC. Lyrical BalladsD. Queen Mab6.Among the most famous realistic novelists of the Victorian age are,W. M. Thackeray,Bronte sisters,etc.A. Joseph ConradB. Henry FieldingC. Charles DickensD. D. H. Lawrence7.In James Joyce’s ____________ the story “Eveline” paints a portrait of a young woman from Dublin deciding whether or not to leave her hometown.A. UlyssesB. OrlandoC. DublinersD. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man8.In the 18th century England,satire was much used in writing. Literature of this age produced some excellent satirists,such as Jonathan Swift,Henry Fielding and.William Blake B. Robert Burns C.Alexander Pope D. Daniel Defoe9.William Wordsworth never used “gaudy and inane phraseology” because he felt that poetry should ____________.A. be read only by the well-educatedB. use difficult vocabulary to express complicated emotionsC. use simple speech to communicate the truths of human experienceD. rely on strange and uncommon words to bring people new experiences10. Virginia Woolf is renowned for adopting the technique,which displays the sequence of thoughts and impressions in a person’s mind.A. mind-readingB. third-person narrationC. stream-of-consciousnessD. feministPart II:Gap Filling (10%)Complete the following sentences and write your answers on the Answer Sheet.1.Geoffrey Chaucer’s work gives us a picture of the condition of English life of his day,such as its work and play,its deeds and dreams,its fun and sympathy.2.During the Norman Conquest,the most important form of literary composition is,the representative of which is the legend of King Arthur and the round table knights.3.Epoch of Renaissance witnessed a particular development of English drama. It was William Shakespeare and who made blank verse the principal vehicle of expression in drama.4.Hamlet,Othello,Macbeth and are generally regarded as William Shakespeare’s four great tragedies.5.Edmund Spenser is generally regarded as the greatest nondramatic poet of the Elizabethan Age. His fame is chiefly based on his masterpiece.6.In Elizabethan Period,wrote more than 50 excellent essays,which made him one of the best essayists in English literature.7.The was a progressive intellectual movement throughout western Europe in the 18th century.8.In the latter part of the 18th century,there appeared,as a reaction against Reason,___________ novel and literature of sentimentality.9.Thomas Gray’s highly praised poem shows the poet’s sympathy for the poor,and condemns the great ones who despise the poor and bring sufferings to the common people.10.The Romantic movement in England had two significant movements as its background:the French Revolution and.11________ is perhaps the most talented early novelist. She wrote a number of books concerning young,relatively wealthy women pursuing marriage,such as Pride and Prejudice and Emma.12.George Byron is chiefly known for his two long poems. One is Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage and the other is.13John Keats wrote several famous ___________, a type of lyric poem that is meditative and formal.14._________,the eldest of the two famous novelist sisters,wrote Jane Eyre in the middle of the 19th century.15._____________ monologue was first successfully used in poetry by Robert Browning.16.One of the most striking features of in the 20th century literature is anti-past,anti-tradition,anti-novel,anti-hero,etc.17.__________,the manifesto of modernist poetry in the 20th century,was written by T. S. Eliot.18. A Passage to India,Howard’s End,and A Room with a View are three of the most famous novels by ___________.19.Lord Jim is one of the most famous novels by _________,who was born in Poland and learned English as his third language.20.Man and Superman and Pygmalion are two of most famous plays by __________.Part III:Definition of Terms (15%)Choose THREE out of the following terms and explain them in two or three sentences.Sonnet;Point of view;Soliloquy;Setting;Heroic coupletPart IV:Appreciation (40%)Choose TWO of the following three excerpts and write a passage of comment (about 80 words)on each one. Your comment should cover the questions after each excerpt.Excerpt 1:I wandered lonely as a cloudThat floats on high o’er vales and hills,When all at once I saw a crowd,A host,of golden daffodils;Beside the lake,beneath the trees,Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.…For oft,when on my couch I lieIn vacant or in pensive mood,They flash upon that inward eyeWhich is the bliss of solitude;And then my heart with pleasure fills,And dances with the daffodils.(William Wordsworth,“I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud”)Questions:1. What is the central image of this poem?What is the poet’s reaction as revealed in the poem?2. Wordsworth believes that “All good poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings”and poetry “takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquility”. How does this poem reflect the poet’s philosophy of composition?Excerpt 2:The proper study of mankind is man.Placed on this isthmus of a middle state,A being darkly wise,and rudely great:With too much knowledge for the Skeptic side,With too much weakness for the Stoic’s pride,He hangs between;in doubt to act,or rest;In doubt to deem himself a God,or beast;In doubt his mind or body to prefer;Born but to die,and reasoning such,Whether he thinks too little or too much;Chaos of thought and passion,all confused;Still by himself abused or disabused;Created half to rise,and half to fall;(Alexander Pope,An Essay on Man)Questions:1. What’s the topic of the above lines?2.Summarize the main idea in a few sentences.Excerpt 3:I shall now therefore humbly propose my own thoughts,which I hope will not be liable to the least objection.I have been assured by a very knowing American of my acquaintance in London,that a young healthy child well nursed is at a year old a most delicious,nourishing,and wholesomefood,whether stewed,roasted,baked,or boiled;and I make no doubt that it will equally serve in a fricassee or a ragout.I do therefore humbly offer it to public consideration that of the hundred and twenty thousand children,already computed,twenty thousand may be reserved for breed,whereof only one fourth part to be males,which is more than we allow to sheep,black cattle,or swine;and my reason is that these children are seldom the fruits of marriage,a circumstance not much regarded by our savages,therefore one male will be sufficient to serve four females. That the remaining hundred thousand may at a year old be offered in sale to the person of quality and fortune through the kingdom,always advising the mother to let them suck plentifully in the last month,so as to render them plump and fat for a good table.A child will make two dishes at an entertainment for friends,and when the family dines alone,the fore or hind quarter will make a reasonable dish;and seasoned with a little pepper or salt will be very good boiled on the fourth day,especially in winter.(Jonathan Swift,A Modest Proposal)Questions:1. What is the author’s modest proposal in the passage?And what do you think is his real idea behind it?2. What kind of tone is shown in the passage?(Explain it with specific quotations from the text)Part V. Critical Reading (25%)Read the attached short story and answer the questions in essay form.1. What’s the turning point in the murder trial?Describe it in a few sentences.2.Read carefully the last two paragraphs of the story and comment,in the form of a 150-200-word essay,on the message or real meaning of the author.The Case for the DefenseGraham Greene1It was the strangest murder trial that I ever attended. They named it the Peckham murder in the headlines,though Northwood Street,where the old woman was found battered to death,was not strictly speaking in Peckham. This was not one of those cases of circumstantial evidence in which you feel the juryman’s anxiety—because mistakes havebeen made—like domes of silence muting the court. No,this murderer was all but found with the body;no one present when the Crown counsel outlined his case believed that the man in the dock stood any chance at all.2He was a heavy stout man with bulging bloodshot eyes. All his muscles seemed to be in his thighs. Yes,an ugly customer,one you wouldn’t forget in a hurry—and that was an important point because the Crown proposed to call four witnesses who hadn’t forgotten him,who had seen him hurrying away from the little red villa in Northwood Street. The clock had just struck two in the morning.3Mrs. Salmon in 15 Northwood Street had been unable to sleep;she heard a door click shut and thought it was her own gate. So she went to the window and saw Adams (that was his name)on the steps of Mrs. Parker’s house. He had just come out and h e was wearing gloves. He had a hammer in his hand and she saw him drop it into the laurel bushes at the front gate. But before he moved away,he had looked up—at her window. The fatal instinct that tells a man when he is watched exposed him in the light of a street-lamp to her gaze—his eyes suffused with horrifying and brutal fear,like an animal’s when you raise a whip. I talked afterwards to Mrs. Salmon,who naturally after the astonishing verdict went in fear herself. As I imagined did all the witnesses—Henry MacDougall,who had been driving home from Benfleet late and nearly ran Adams down at the corner of Northwood Street. Adams was walking in the middle of the road looking dazed. And old Mr. Wheeler,who lived next door to Mrs. Parker,at No. 12 and was waken by a noise—like a chair falling—through the thin-as-paper villa wall,and got up and looked out of the window,just as Mrs. Salmon had done,saw Adam’s back and,as he turned,those bulging eyes. In Laurel Avenue he had been seen by yet another witness—his luck was badly out;he might as well have committed the crime in broad daylight.4“I understand,” the counsel said,“that the defense proposes to plead mistaken identity. Adams’ wife will tell you that he was with her at two in the morning on F ebruary 14,but after you have heard the witnesses for the Crown and examined carefully the features of the prisoner,I do not think you will be prepared to admit the possibility of a mistake.”5It was all over,you would have said,but the hanging.6After the formal evidence had been given by the policeman who had found the body and the surgeon who examined it,Mrs. Salmon was called. She was the ideal witness,with her slight Scotch accent and her expression of honesty,care and kindness.7The counsel for the Crown brought the story gently out. She spoke very firmly. There was no malice in her,and no sense of importance at standing there in the Central Criminal Court with a judge in scarlet handing on her words and the reporters writing them down. Yes,she said,and then she had gone down stairs and rung up the police station.8“And do you see the man here in court?”She looked straight and at the big man in the dock,who stared at her with his Pekingese eyes without emotion.“Yes,” she sai d,“there he is.”“You are quite certain?”She said simply,“I couldn’t be mistaken,sir.”It was as easy as that.“Thank you,Mrs. Salmon.”9Counsel for the defense rose to cross-examine. If you had reported as many murder trials as I have,you would have known beforehand what line he would take. And I was right,up to a point.10“Now,Mrs. Salmon,you must have remembered that a man’s life may depend on your evidence.”“I do remember it,sir.”“Is your eyesight good?”“I have never had to wear spectacles,sir.”“You are a woman of fifty-five?”“Fifty-six,sir.”“And the man you saw was on the other side of the road?”“Yes,sir.”“And it was two o’clock in the morning. You must have remarkable eyes,Mrs. Salmon?”“No,sir. There was moonlight,and the man looked up,he had the lamplight on his face.”11I couldn’t make out what he was at. He couldn’t have expected any other answer than the one he got.12“None whatever,sir. It isn’t a face one forgets.”13Counsel took a look around the court for a moment. Then he said,“Do you mind,Mrs. Salmon,examining again the people in court?No,not the prisoner. Stand up,please,Mr. Adams,” and there at the back of the court with thick stout body and muscular legs and a pair of bulging eyes,was the exact image of the man in the dock. He was even dressed the same—tight blue suit and striped tie.14“Now think very carefully,Mrs. Salmon. Can you still swear that the man you saw drop the hammer in Mrs. Parker’s garden was the p risoner—and not this man,who is his twin brother?”15Of course she couldn’t. She looked from one to the other and didn’t say a word.16There the big brute sat in the dock with his legs crossed,and there he stood too at the back of the court and they both stared at Mrs. Salmon. She shook her head.17What we saw then was the end of the case. There wasn’t a witness prepared to swear that it was the prisoner he’d seen. And the brother?He had his own alibi too;he was with his wife.18And so the man was acquitted for lack of evidence. But whether if he did the murder and not his brother—he was punished or not,I don’t know. That extraordinary day had an extraordinary end. I followed Mrs. Salmon out of court and we got wedged in the crowd who were waiting,of course,for the twins. The police tried to drive the crowd away,but all they could do was keep the roadway clear for traffic. I learned later that they tried to get the twins to leave by a back way,but they wouldn’t. One of them—no one knew which—said,“I’ve been acquitted,haven’t I?” and they walked bang out of the front entrance. Then it happened. I don’t know how,though I was only six feet away. The crowd moved and somehow one of the twins got pushed on to the road right in front of a bus.19He gave a squeal like a rabbit and that was all;he was dead,his skull smashed just as Mrs. Parker’s had been. Divine vengeance?I wish I knew. There was the other Adams getting on his feet from beside the body and looking straight over at Mrs. Salmon. He wascrying,but whether he was the murderer or the innocent man nobody will ever be able to tell. But if you were Mrs. Salmon,could you sleep at night?。