Literature based GK
1. The epigraph of The Waste Land is borrowed from—
(A) Virgil
(B) Petronius
(C) Seneca
(D) Homer
Ans: (D)
2. Who called The Waste Land ‘a music of ideas’ ?
(A) Allen Tate
(B) J. C. Ransom
(C) I. A. Richards
(D) F. R. Leavis
3. T. S. Eliot has borrowed the term ‘Unreal City’
in first and third sections from—
(A) Baudelaire
(B) Irving Babbit
(C) Dante
(D) Laforgue
Ans: (C)
4. Which of the following myths does not figure in
The Waste Land ?
(A) Oedipus
(B) Grail Legend of Fisher King
(C) Philomela
(D) Sysyphus
Ans: (D)
5. Joe Gargery is Pip’s—
(A) brother
(B) brother-in-law
(C) guardian
(D) cousin
Ans: (C)
6. Estella is the daughter of—
(A) Joe Gargery
(B) Abel Magwitch
(C) Miss Havisham
(D) Bentley Drummle
Ans: (A)
7. Which book of John Ruskin influenced Mahatma
Gandhi ?
(A) Sesame and Lilies
(B) The Seven Lamps of Architecture
(C) Unto This Last
(D) Fors Clavigera
Ans: (C)
8. Graham Greene’s novels are marked by—
(A) Catholicism
(B) Protestantism
(C) Paganism
(D) Buddhism
Ans: (A)
9. One important feature of Jane Austen’s style is—
(A) boisterous humour
(B) humour and pathos
(C) subtlety of irony
(D) stream of consciousness
Ans: (B)
10. The title of the poem ‘The Second Coming’ is
taken from—
(A) The Bible
(B) The Irish mythology
(C) The German mythology
(D) The Greek mythology
Ans: (A)
11. The main character in Paradise Lost Book I and
Book II is—
(A) God
(B) Satan
(C) Adam
(D) Eve
Ans: (B)
12. In Sons and Lovers, Paul Morel’s mother’s name
is—
(A) Susan
(B) Jane
(C) Gertrude
(D) Emily
Ans: (C)
13. The twins in Lord of the Flies are—
(A) Ralph and Jack
(B) Simon and Eric
(C) Ralph and Eric
(D) Simon and Jack
Ans: (A)
14. Mr. Jaggers, in Great Expectations, is a—
(A) lawyer
(B) postman
(C) judge
(D) school teacher
Ans: (A)
15. What does ‘I’ stand for in the following line ?
‘To Carthage
then I came’
(A) Buddha
(B) Tiresias
(C) Smyrna Merchant
(D) Augustine
Ans: (D)
16. The following lines are an example of …… image.
‘The river sweats
Oil and tar’……
(A) visual
(B) kinetic
(C) erotic
(D) sensual
Ans: (C)
17. Which of the following novels has the subtitle ‘A Novel Without a Hero’ ?
(A) Vanity Fair
(B) Middlemarch
(C) Wuthering Heights
(D) Oliver Twist
Ans: (A)
18. In ‘Leda and the Swan’, who wooes Leda in guise
of a swan ?
(A) Mars
(B) Hercules
(C) Zeus
(D) Bacchus
Ans: (D)
19. Who invented the term ‘Sprung rhythm’ ?
(A) Hopkins
(B) Tennyson
(C) Browning
(D) Wordsworth
Ans: (A)
20. Who wrote the poem ‘Defence of Lucknow’ ?
(A) Browning
(B) Tennyson
(C) Swinburne
(D) Rossetti
Ans: (C)
21. Which of the following plays of Shakespeare has
an epilogue ?
(A) The Tempest
(B) Henry IV, Pt I
(C) Hamlet
(D) Twelfth Night
Ans: (A)
22. Hamlet’s famous speech ‘To be, or not to be; that
is the question’ occurs in—
(A) Act II, Scene I
(B) Act III, Scene III
(C) Act IV, Scene III
(D) Act III, Scene I
Ans: (D)
23. Identify the character in The Tempest who is
referred to as ‘an honest old councellor’—
(A) Alonso
(B) Ariel
(C) Gonzalo
(D) Stephano
Ans: (C)
24. What is the sub-title of the play Twelfth Night ?
(A) Or, What is you Will
(B) Or, What you Will
(C) Or, What you Like It
(D) Or, What you Think
Ans: (B)
25. Which of the following plays of Shakespeare,
according to T. S. Eliot, is ‘artistic failure’ ?
(A) The Tempest
(B) Hamlet
(C) Henry IV, Pt I
(D) Twelfth Night
Ans: (B)
26. Who is Thomas Percy in Henry IV, Pt I ?
(A) Earl of Northumberland
(B) Earl of March
(C) Earl of Douglas
(D) Earl of Worcester
Ans: (A)
27. Paradise Lost was originally written in—
(A) ten books
(B) eleven books
(C) nine books
(D) eight books
Ans: (D)
28. In Pride and Prejudice, Lydia elopes with—
(A) Darcy
(B) Wickham
(C) William Collins
(D) Charles Bingley
Ans: (B)
29. Who coined the phrase ‘Egotistical Sublime’?
(A) William Wordsworth
(B) P. B. Shelley
(C) S. T. Coleridge
(D) John Keats
Ans: (C)
30. Who is commonly known as ‘Pip’ in Great
Expectations ?
(A) Philip Pirrip
(B) Filip Pirip
(C) Philip Pip
(D) Philips Pirip
Ans: (C)
31. The novel The Power and the Glory is set in—
(A) Mexico
(B) Italy
(C) France
(D) Germany
Ans: (A)
32. Which of the following is Golding’s first novel ?
(A) The Inheritors
(B) Lord of the Flies
(C) Pincher Martin
(D) Pyramid
Ans: (B)
33. Identify the character who is a supporter of
Women’s Rights in Sons and Lovers ?
(A) Mrs. Morel
(B) Annie
(C) Miriam
(D) Clara Dawes
Ans: (A)
34. Vanity Fair is a novel by—
(A) Jane Austen
(B) Charles Dickens
(C) W. M. Thackeray
(D) Thomas Hardy
Ans: (C)
35. Shelley’s Adonais is an elegy on the death of—
(A) Milton
(B) Coleridge
(C) Keats
(D) Johnson
Ans: (C)
36. Which of the following is the first novel of D.
H. Lawrence ?
(A) The White Peacock
(B) The Trespasser
(C) Sons and Lovers
(D) Women in Love
Ans: (A)
37. In the poem ‘Tintern Abbey’, ‘dearest friend’
refers to—
(A) Nature
(B) Dorothy
(C) Coleridge
(D) Wye
Ans: (B)
38. Who, among the following, is not the second
generation of British Romantics ?
(A) Keats
(B) Wordsworth
(C) Shelley
(D) Byron
Ans: (B)
39. Which of the following poems of Coleridge is a
ballad ?
(A) Work Without Hope
(B) Frost at Midnight
(C) The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
(D) Youth and Age
Ans: (C)
40. Identify the writer who was expelled from Oxford
for circulating a pamphlet—
(A) P. B. Shelley
(B) Charles Lamb
(C) Hazlitt
(D) Coleridge
Ans: (A)
41. Keats’s Endymion is dedicated to—
(A) Leigh Hunt
(B) Milton
(C) Shakespeare
(D) Thomas Chatterton
Ans: (A)
42. The second series of Essays of Elia by Charles
Lamb was published in—
(A) 1823
(B) 1826
(C) 1834
(D) 1833
Ans: (D)
43. Which of the following poets does not belong to
the ‘Lake School’ ?
(A) Keats
(B) Coleridge
(C) Southey
(D) Wordsworth
Ans: (A)
44. Who, among the following writers, was not
educated at Christ’s Hospital School, London ?
(A) Charles Lamb
(B) William Wordsworth
(C) Leigh Hunt
(D) S. T. Coleridge
Ans: (A)
45. Who derided Hazlitt as one of the members of the
‘Cockney School of Poetry’ ?
(A) Tennyson
(B) Charles Lamb
(C) Lockhart
(D) T. S. Eliot
Ans: (D)
46. Tennyson’s poem ‘In Memoriam’ was written in
memory of—
(A) A. H. Hallam
(B) Edward King
(C) Wellington
(D) P. B. Shelley
Ans: (A)
47. Who, among the following, is not connected with
the Oxford Movement ?
(A) Robert Browning
(B) John Keble
(C) E. B. Pusey
(D) J. H. Newman
Ans: (A)
48. Identify the work by Swinburne which begins
‘‘when the hounds of spring are on winter’s traces…’’—
(A) Chastelard
(B) A Song of Italy
(C) Atalanta in Calydon
(D) Songs before Sunrise
Ans: (C)
49. Carlyle’s work On Heroes, Hero-Worship and the
Heroic in History is a course of—
(A) six lectures
(B) five lectures
(C) four lectures
(D) seven lectures
Ans: (B)
50. Who is praised as a hero by Carlyle in his
lecture on the ‘Hero as King’ ?
(A) Johnson
(B) Cromwell
(C) Shakespeare
(D) Luther
Ans: (B)
51. Identify the work by Ruskin which began as a
defence of contemporary landscape artist especially Turner—
(A) The Stones of Venice
(B) The Two Paths
(C) The Seven Lamps of Architecture
(D) Modern Painters
Ans: (D)
52. The term ‘the Palliser Novels’ is used to
describe the political novels of—
(A) Charles Dickens
(B) Anthony Trollope
(C) W. H. White
(D) B. Disraeli
Ans: (D)
53. Identify the poet whom Queen Victoria, regarded
as the perfect poet of ‘love and loss’—
(A) Tennyson
(B) Browning
(C) Swinburne
(D) D. G. Rossetti
Ans: (D)
54. A verse form using stanza of eight lines, each
with eleven syllables, is known as—
(A) Spenserian Stanza
(B) Ballad
(C) Ottava Rima
(D) Rhyme Royal
Ans: (C)
55. Identify the writer who first used blank verse in
English poetry—
(A) Sir Thomas Wyatt
(B) William Shakespeare
(C) Earl of Surrey
(D) Milton
Ans: (C)
56. The Aesthetic Movement which blossomed during the
1880s was not influenced by—
(A) The Pre-Raphaelites
(B) Ruskin
(C) Pater
(D) Matthew Arnold
Ans: (D)
57. Identify the rhetorical figure used in the
following line of Tennyson : ‘‘Faith unfaithful kept him falsely true.’’
(A) Oxymoron
(B) Metaphor
(C) Simile
(D) Synecdoche
Ans: (A)
58. W. B. Yeats used the phrase ‘the artifice of
eternity’ in his poem—
(A) Sailing to Byzantium
(B) Byzantium
(C) The Second Coming
(D) Leda and the Swan
Ans: (A)
59. Who is Pip’s friend in London ?
(A) Pumblechook
(B) Herbert Pocket
(C) Bentley Drummle
(D) Jaggers
Ans: (D)
60. Who is Mr. Tench in The Power and the Glory ?
(A) A teacher
(B) A clerk
(C) A thief
(D) A dentist
Ans: (C)
61. Pride and Prejudice was originally a youthful
work entitled—
(A) ‘Last Impressions’
(B) ‘False Impressions’
(C) ‘First Impressions’
(D) ‘True Impressions’
Ans: (C)
62. Identify the novel in which the character of
Charlotte Lucas figures—
(A) Great Expectations
(B) The Power and the Glory
(C) Lord of the Flies
(D) Pride and Prejudice
Ans: (D)
63. ‘There’s a special providence in the fall of a
sparrow.’’ The line given above occurs in
(A) Hamlet
(B) Henry IV, Pt I
(C) The Tempest
(D) Twelfth Night
Ans: (A)
64. Who said that Shakespeare in his comedies has
only heroines and no heroes ?
(A) Ben Jonson
(B) John Ruskin
(C) Thomas Carlyle
(D) William Hazlitt
Ans: (B)
65. Sir John Falstaff is one of Shakespeare’s
greatest—
(A) comic figures
(B) historical figures
(C) romantic figures
(D) tragic figures
Ans: (A)
66. That Milton was of the Devil’s party without
knowing it, was said by—
(A) Blake
(B) Eliot
(C) Johnson
(D) Shelley
Ans: (A)
67. Who called Shelley ‘a beautiful and ineffectual
angel beating in the void his luminous wings in vain’ ?
(A) Walter Pater
(B) A. C. Swinburne
(C) Matthew Arnold
(D) T. S. Eliot
Ans: (C)
68. Essays of Elia are—
(A) full of didactic sermonising
(B) practically autobiographical fragments
(C) remarkable for their aphoristic style
(D) satirical and critical
Ans: (B)
69. The theme of Tennyson’s Poem ‘The Princess’ is—
(A) Queen Victoria’s coronation
(B) Industrial Revolution
(C) Women’s Education and Rights
(D) Rise of Democracy
Ans: (C)
70. Thackeray’s Esmond is a novel of historical
realism capturing the spirit of—
(A) the Medieval age
(B) the Elizabethan age
(C) the age of Queen Anne
(D) the Victorian age
Ans: (A)
71. Oedipus Complex is—
(A) a kind of physical ailment
(B) a kind of vitamin
(C) a brother’s attraction towards his sister
(D) a son’s attraction towards his mother
Ans: (D)
72. ‘My own great religion is a belief in the blood,
the flesh as being wiser than the intellect.’’ Who wrote this ?
(A) Graham Greene
(B) D. H. Lawrence
(C) Charles Dickens
(D) Jane Austen
Ans: (B)
73. Shakespeare makes fun of the Puritans in his
play—
(A) Twelfth Night
(B) Hamlet
(C) The Tempest
(D) Henry IV, Pt I
Ans: (A)
74. ‘The rarer action is in virtue that in
vengeance.’ This line occurs in—
(A) Hamlet
(B) Henry IV, Pt I
(C) The Tempest
(D) Twelfth Night
Ans: (C)
75. Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice is a—
(A) Picaresque novel
(B) Gothic novel
(C) Domestic novel
(D) Historical novel
Ans: (C)
76. ‘Heaven lies about us in our infancy’. This line
occurs in the poem—
(A) Immortality Ode
(B) Tintern Abbey
(C) The Second Coming
(D) Leda and the Swan
Ans: (A)
77. Wordsworth calls himself ‘a Worshipper of Nature’
in his poem—
(A) Immortality Ode
(B) Tintern Abbey
(C) The Prelude
(D) The Solitary Reaper
Ans: (B)
78. When Wordsworth’s ‘Immortality Ode’ was first
published in 1802, it had only—
(A) Stanzas I to IV
(B) Stanzas I to V
(C) Stanzas I to VI
(D) Stanzas I to VII
Ans: (B)
79. Which method of narration has been employed by
Dickens in his novel Great Expectations ?
(A) Direct or epic method
(B) Documentary method
(C) Stream of Consciousness technique
(D) Autobiographical method
Ans: (A)
80. Who said ‘Keats was a Greek’ ?
(A) Wordsworth
(B) Coleridge
(C) Lamb
(D) Shelley
Ans: (B)
81. D. G. Rossetti was a true literary descendant of—
(A) Keats
(B) Byron
(C) Shelley
(D) Wordsworth
Ans: (A)
82. To which character in Hamlet does the following
description apply ? ‘‘The tedious wiseacre who meddles his way to his
doom.’’
(A) Claudius
(B) Hamlet
(C) Polonius
(D) Rosencrantz
Ans: (B)
83. ‘Brevity is the soul of wit’ is a quotation from—
(A) Milton
(B) William Shakespeare
(C) T. S. Eliot
(D) Ruskin
Ans: (B)
84. ‘Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous,
there shall be no more cakes and ale’. Who speaks the lines given above in
Twelfth Night ?
(A) Duke Orsino
(B) Malvolio
(C) Sir Andrew Aguecheek
(D) Sir Toby Belch
Ans: (D)
85. In Paradise Lost, Book I, Satan is the embodiment
of Milton’s—
(A) Sense of injured merit
(B) Hatred of tyranny
(C) Spirit of revolt
(D) All these
Ans: (C)
86. Who calls poetry ‘the breadth and finer spirit of
all knowledge’ ?
(A) Wordsworth
(B) Shelley
(C) Keats
(D) Coleridge
Ans: (A)
87. Twelfth Night opens with the speech of—
(A) Viola
(B) Duke
(C) Olivia
(D) Malvolio
Ans: (B)
88. What was the cause of William’s death in Sons and
Lovers ?
(A) An accident
(B) An overdose of morphia
(C) Suicide
(D) Pneumonia
Ans: (D)
89. Which poem of Coleridge is an opium dream ?
(A) Kubla Khan
(B) Christabel
(C) The Ancient Mariner
(D) Ode on the Departing Year
Ans: (A)
90. Which stanza form did Shelley use in his famous
poem ‘Ode to theWest Wind’ ?
(A) Rime royal
(B) Ottava rima
(C) Terza rima
(D) Spenserian Stanza
Ans: (C)
91. The phrase ‘Pathetic fallacy’ is coined by—
(A) Milton
(B) Coleridge
(C) Carlyle
(D) John Ruskin
Ans: (D)
92. Tracts for the Times relates to—
(A) The Oxford Movement
(B) The Pre-Raphaelite Movement
(C) The Romantic Movement
(D) The Symbolist Movement
Ans: (A)
93. The Chartist Movement sought—
(A) Protection of the political rights of the working
class
(B) Recognition of chartered trading companies
(C) Political rights for women
(D) Protection of the political rights of the middle
class
Ans: (A)
94. Who wrote Biographia Literaria ?
(A) Byron
(B) Shelley
(C) Coleridge
(D) Lamb
Ans: (C)
95. Who was Fortinbras ?
(A) Claudius’s son
(B) Son to the king of Norway
(C) Ophelia’s lover
(D) Hamlet’s friend
Ans: (B)
96. How many soliloquies are spoken by Hamlet in the
play Hamlet ?
(A) Nine
(B) Seven
(C) Five
(D) Three
Ans: (C)
97. ‘The best lack all conviction, while the worst
are full of passionate intensity.’ The above lines have been taken from—
(A) The Waste Land
(B) Tintern Abbey
(C) The Second Coming
(D) Prayer for My Daughter
Ans: (C)
98. William Morel in Sons and Lovers is drawn after—
(A) Lawrence’s father
(B) Lawrence’s brother
(C) Lawrence himself
(D) None of these
Ans: (D)
99. The most notable characteristic of Keats’ poetry
is—
(A) Satire
(B) Sensuality
(C) Sensuousness
(D) Social reform
Ans: (C)
100. The key-note of Browning’s philosophy of life
is—
(A) agnosticism
(B) optimism
(C) pessimism
(D) scepticism
Ans: (B)
101. The title of Carlyle’s ‘Sartor Resartus’ means—
(A) Religious Scripture
(B) Seaside Resort
(C) Tailor Repatched
(D) None of these
Ans: (C)
102. Epipsychidion is composed by—
(A) Coleridge
(B) Wordsworth
(C) Keats
(D) Shelley
Ans: (D)
103. ‘The better part of valour is discretion’ occurs
in Shakespeare’s—
(A) Hamlet
(B) Twelfth Night
(C) The Tempest
(D) Henry IV, Pt I
Ans: (D)
104. Epic similes are found in which work of John
Milton ?
(A) Paradise Lost
(B) Sonnets
(C) Lycidas
(D) Areopagitica
Ans: (A)
105. Identify the writer who used a pseudonym,
Michael Angelo Titmarsh, for much of his early work—
(A) Charles Dickens
(B) W. M. Thackeray
(C) Graham Greene
(D) D. H. Lawrence
Ans: (C)
106. Browning’s famous poem ‘Rabbi Ben Ezra’ is
included in—
(A) Dramatis Personae
(B) Dramatic Idyls
(C) Asolando
(D) Red Cotton Night-Cap Country
Ans: (A)
107. S. T. Coleridge was an Associate of—
(A) The Royal Society of Edinburgh
(B) The Royal Society of London
(C) Royal Society of Arts
(D) Royal Society of Literature
Ans: (D)
108. Which of the following is an unfinished novel by
Jane Austen ?
(A) Sense and Sensibility
(B) Mansfield Park
(C) Sandition
(D) Persuasion
Ans: (C)
109. Why did Miss Havisham remain a spinster
throughout her life in Great Expectations ?
(A) She was poor
(B) She was arrogant
(C) Because she was betrayed by the bridegroom
(D) She was unwilling to marry
Ans: (B)
110. W. B. Yeats received the Nobel Prize for
literature in the year—
(A) 1938
(B) 1925
(C) 1932
(D) 1923
Ans: (D)
111. The Romantic Revival in English Poetry was
influenced by the—
(A) French Revolution
(B) Glorious Revolution of 1688
(C) Reformation
(D) Oxford Movement
Ans: (A)
112. The Pre-Raphaelite poets were mostly indebted to
the poets of the—
(A) Puritan movement
(B) Romantic revival
(C) Neo-classical age
(D) Metaphysical school
Ans: (B)
113. ‘O, you are sick of self-love.’ Who is referred
to in these words in Twelfth Night ?
(A) Orsino
(B) Sir Andrew
(C) Sir Toby
(D) Malvolio
Ans: (D)
114. Hamlet is—
(A) an intellectual
(B) a man of action
(C) a passionate lover
(D) an over ambitious man
Ans: (C)
115. Which of Shakespeare’s characters exclaims;
‘Brave, new, world !’ ?
(A) Ferdinand
(B) Antonio
(C) Miranda
(D) Prospero
Ans: (C)
116. Paradise Lost shows an influence of—
(A) Paganism
(B) Pre-Christian theology
(C) Christianity and the Renaissance
(D) Greek nihilism
Ans: (C)
117. The style of Paradise Lost is—
(A) more Latin than most poems
(B) more spontaneous than thought out
(C) more satirical than spontaneous
(D) more dramatic than lyrical
Ans: (A)
118. In Pride and Prejudice we initially dislike but
later tend to like—
(A) Mr. Bennet
(B) Wickham
(C) Bingley
(D) Darcy
Ans: (D)
119. Who in Hamlet suggests that one should neither
be a lender nor a borrower ?
(A) Gertrude
(B) Polonius
(C) Horatio
(D) Hamlet
Ans: (B)
120. Shakespeare’s Henry IV, Pt I contains his—
(A) senecan attitude
(B) patriotism
(C) love of nature
(D) platonic ideals
Ans: (B)
Answers
1. (D) 2. (A) 3. (C) 4. (D) 5.
(C)
6.
(A) 7. (C) 8. (A) 9. (B) 10.
(A)
11.
(B) 12. (C) 13. (A) 14. (A) 15. (D)
16.
(C) 17. (A) 18. (D) 19. (A) 20. (C)
21.
(A) 22. (D) 23. (C) 24. (B) 25. (B)
26.
(A) 27. (D) 28. (B) 29. (C) 30. (C)
31.
(A) 32. (B) 33. (A) 34. (C) 35. (C)
36.
(A) 37. (B) 38. (B) 39. (C) 40. (A)
41.
(A) 42. (D) 43. (A) 44. (A) 45. (D)
46.
(A) 47. (A) 48. (C) 49. (B) 50. (B)
51.
(D) 52. (D) 53. (D) 54. (C) 55. (C)
56.
(D) 57. (A) 58. (A) 59. (D) 60. (C)
61.
(C) 62. (D) 63. (A) 64. (B) 65. (A)
66.
(A) 67. (C) 68. (B) 69. (C) 70. (A)
71.
(D) 72. (B) 73. (A) 74. (C) 75. (C)
76.
(A) 77. (B) 78. (B) 79. (A) 80. (B)
81.
(A) 82. (B) 83. (B) 84. (D) 85. (C)
86.
(A) 87. (B) 88. (D) 89. (A) 90. (C)
91.
(D) 92. (A) 93. (A) 94. (C) 95. (B)
96.
(C) 97. (C) 98. (D) 99. (C) 100. (B)
101.
(C) 102. (D) 103. (D) 104. (A) 105. (C)
106.
(A) 107. (D) 108. (C) 109. (B) 110. (D)
111.
(A) 112. (B) 113. (D) 114. (C) 115. (C)
116.
(C) 117. (A) 118. (D) 119. (B) 120. (B)
d
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