A. The common MAN
B. The promises of technology
C. The outcast figure
D. The movement of time
A. Ann radcliffe
B. William wordsworth
C. John keats
D. Alfred lord tennyson
A. It thematizes the importance of choosing action over complacency.
B. It reflects a victorian attitude of continuing to fight against loss of hope or faith.
C. It uses greek mythology to comment on contemporary questions.
D. It emphasizes the internal life of the mind over social action.
A. His promethean striving to exceed human limitations as explored by byron and percy shelley
B. Its suggestion that the natural order has laws beyond human control
C. His desire to create a political revolution
D. Both a and b
A. Its mocking tone.
B. Its absurd response to a real issue.
C. Its sentimental plea to its audience.
D. Its attempt to shock readers into acting.
A. Familiar essays
B. Comedies of manners
C. Romanticism
D. Medievalism
A. William congreve
B. Ann radcliffe
C. Matthew lewis
D. Charles dickens
A. Devotion to traditional authority in political and theoretical matters.
B. Emphasis on the world being governed by laws that could be discerned through rational exploration.
C. Reliance on classical scholarship.
D. Defense of violent emotions as natural.
A. Scientific emphasis on detailed observation.
B. The political focus on individuals and their rights.
C. Philosophical theories of sympathy and human emotions.
D. The continuing importance of mythological stories.
A. A return to neoclassical aesthetics
B. Disassociating painting and poetry
C. Lavish attention to the sensuous elements of life
D. Rejecting english poetic tradition