Lit Mcqs
Lit Mcqs
Lit Mcqs
1889 and first performed in 1890. Natalia, Stepan Stepanovitch Chubokov, Ivan are
8. A Tale of a Tub is a satire by Jonathan Swift. It is a prose parody which divided into
sections of “Digression” and “A Tale” of three brothers Peter, Martin and Jack.
11. Pope is the third most frequently quoted writer in The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations, after
Shakespeare and Tennyson.
12. The Rape of the Lock is dedicated to his friend John Caryll.
14. The Rape of the Lock was published in 1712; with a revised version published in 1714.
15. It is a mock epic which satirizes high society quarrel between Arabella Fermor (Belinda) and Lord
Petre. Belinda is compared to the Sun in the poem.
16. “An Essay on Criticism” (1711) and “Windsor Forest” (1713) are also his works.
18. The title was borrowed from Virgil’s Aeneid in Latin ( Arms and the man I Sing). Raina is a character
in the play.
19. Shaw’s other works are Candida, You Never Can Tell, The Man of Destiny.
20. Between the Acts is the final novel by Virginia Woolf published in 1941 shortly after
her suicide.
25. It is an autobiographical novel. The main character Belacqua is a writer and teacher in the novel.
26. Edgar Allan Poe began his own journal “The Penn”. ( Later it was renamed as “The
Stylus”)
27. Thomas Hardy first employed the term “Wessex” in Far from the Madding Crowd.
28. Franklin Evans or The Inebriate is the only novel ever written by Walt Whitman.
29. George Bernard Shaw is the only person to have been awarded both a Nobel Prize
30. Shaw wrote 63 plays. His first novel Immaturity was written in 1879 but last one to be printed in
1931.
31. His last significant play was In Good King Charles Golden Days.
33. Her works- Adam Bede(1859), The Mill on the Floss (1860), Silas Marner (1861), Romola (1866), Felix
Holt, the Radical (1866), Middlemarch(1871-72), Daniel Doronda (1876).
35. Gustav Flaubert was a French writer and well known for his first published novel, Madame Bovary
(1857).
36. Happy Days is a play in two acts by Samuel Beckett. Winnie, Willie are the
37. Henrik Ibsen is often regarded to as “the father of realism” and one of the founders
of Modernism in Theatre.
39. Chaucer lived during the reigns of : Edward III, Richard II and Henry IV
41. The Hundred Year's War was fought between England and France.
44. Twenty Nine pilgrims in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales were going on the pilgrimage
from the Tabard Inn. (30, including Owner of Tabard Inn)
45. Three pilgrims in the Prologue to the Canterbury Tales represent the military
profession.
46. Eight ecclesiastical characters are portrayed in the Prologue in Canterbury Tales.
47. It is believed that the Host at the Inn was a real man. His name was Harry Bailly.
48. The pilgrims were going to Shrine of St. Thomas Becket at Canterbury.
49. Three women characters figure in the Prologue to the Canterbury Tales.
51. “Bath” is the name of the town to which she belonged in Chaucer’s “Wife of Bath”.
52. "He was as fresh as the month of May" .This line occurs in the Prologue. This is
54. The War of Roses was fought between The House of York and The House of
Lancaster
56. John Wycliffe was the first to render the Bible into English in 1380.
57. The Piers the Plowman is a series of visions seen by its author Langland. ‘The
Vision of a 'Field Full of Folks' was the first vision that he saw.
58. Occleve in The Governail of Princes wrote a famous poem mourning the death of
Chaucer.
59. Caxton was the first to set up a printing press in England in 1476.
60. William Tyndale’s English New Testament is the earliest version of the Bible.
61. Tottle's Miscellany is a famous anthology of 'Songs and Sonnets' by Wyatt and
Surrey.
63. Thomas Mores' Utopia was first written in Latin in 1516. It was rendered into
English in 1551.
64. Roister Doister is believed to be the first regular comedy in English by Nicholas Udall.
65. Gorboduc is believed to be the first regular tragedy in English by Sackville and
Norton in collaboration.
66. Chaucer's Physician in the Doctor of Physique was heavily dependent upon
Astrology.
69. Forest of Arden appears in the play As You Like It by William Shakespeare.
71. Astrophel: A Pastorall Elegy upon the Death of the Most Noble and Valorous Knight, Sir Philip Sidney
is a poem by the English poet Edmund Spenser.
73. The first tragedy Gorboduc was later entitled as Ferrex and Porrex.
75. In his Apologie for Poetrie, Sidney defends the Three Dramatic Unities.
76. Christopher Marlowe wrote only tragedies. He first used Blank Verse in his Jew of Malta.
77. "Was this the face that launched a thousand ships”. This line occurs in Doctor Faustus by Marlowe.
78. Ben Jonson used the phrase 'Marlowe's mighty line' for Marlowe's Blank Verse.
80. The phrase 'The Mousetrap' used by Shakespeare in Hamlet. It is the play within the
play.
81. Spenser dedicates the Preface to The Faerie Queene to Sir Walter Raleigh.
82. The Faerie Queene is an allegory. In this Queen Elizabeth is allegorized through the character of
Gloriana.
85. In the original scheme or plan of the Faerie Queene as designed by Spenser, it was to be completed
in Twelve Books. But he could not complete the whole plan. Only six books exist now.
87. In the Dedicatory Letter, Spenser Says that the real beginning of the allegory in the
88. The Faerie Queene is basically a moral allegory. Spenser derived this concept of
moral allegory from Aristotle.
90. Spenser divided his ‘Shepheardes Calender’ into twelve Ecologues. They represent
94. Ten Essays were published in Bacon's First Edition of Essays in 1597.
95. 58 essays of Bacon were published in his third and last edition of Essays in 1625.
96. "......... a mixture of falsehood is like alloy in coin of gold and silver, which may make the metal work
the better , but it embaseth it". These lines occur in Bacon’s “Of Truth”.
98. "Life is a tale, told by an idiot, Full of sound and fury signifying nothing." These lines
99. "The lunatic, the lover, and the poet, Are of imagination all compact." These lines
100. "Neither a borrower nor a lender be”. This line was told by Polonius in Hamlet.