Drils English
Drils English
3. “Wieland” was written by _______________. 13. ______________ is the author of the literary work “The Last
a. Albert Camus Leaf” and “The Ransom of Red Chief.”
b. Johann David Wyss a. William Faulkner
c. Charles Brockden Brown b. Walt Whitman
d. Edgar Lew Wallace c. O. Henry
d. William Wordsworth
4. ______________ is the author of the literary work
“Magnificence” - about a girl abused by an old man. 14. “Pied Piper of Hamelin” and “The Ring and The Book” were
a. Estrella Alfon written by _____________.
b. Walt Whitman a. Percy Shelley
c. Edgar Lew Wallace b. John Milton
d. Robert Penn Warren c. Thomas Moore
d. Robert Browning
5. ______________ is the author of the literary work “The Tyger”
and “The Lamb.” 15. ______________ is the author of the literary work “The Way
a. Samuel Butler of All Fesh.”
b. Carl Friedrich Spitteler a. Alfred Lord Tennyson
c. William Blake b. Samuel Butler
d. George Orwell c. Edgar Lew Wallace
d. William Shakespeare
6. The Father of American Literature.
a. Virgil 16. ______________ is the author of the literary work “The
b. William Shakespeare Stranger,”” The Plague” and “The Fall.”
c. Mark Twain a. Albert Camus
d. Geoffrey Chaucer b. Fyodor Dostoyevsky
c. Robert Penn Warren
7. ______________ is regarded as the best French writer of short d. Francesco Petrarch
stories. His 300 stories were written in the naturalist style and
often described the life of the lower and middle classes. “Boule 17. ______________ is the author of the literary works “Echoes
de suif” (“Ball of Fat”) is regarded as his best story, while the of Life and Death” and “Hawthorn and Lavender.”
best known is “La Parure” (“The Necklace”) a. Washington Irving
a. Guy de Maupassant b. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
b. Robert Frost c. William Ernest Henley
c. Ralph Waldo Emerson d. Robert Browning
d. Leo Tolstoy
18. The Father of English Novel.
8. “Song: To Celia” was written by ________________. a. Francis Bacon
a. Percy Shelley b. Charles Brown
b. Henry David Thoreau c. Henry Fielding
c. Washington Irving d. Guy de Maupassant
d. Ben Jonson
9. ______________ is the author of the literary work “Les 19. ______________ is the author of the literary works “Holy
Contemplations.” Sonnets” and “The Flea.”
a. Turold a. John Donne
b. Victor Hugo b. Robert Penn Warren
c. John Milton c. Albert Camus
d. Boris Pasternak d. George Eliott
10. ______________ is the author of the literary work “Where 20. ______________ is the author of the literary work “For
the Mind is Without Fear” Whom the Bell Tolls” and “The Old Man and The Sea.”
a. Albert Camus a. Albert Camus
b. John Donne b. John Donne
c. Ernest Hemingway b. Alfred Lord Tennyson
d. Zane Grey c. Henry David Thoreau
d. Charles Brown
21. ______________ is the author of the literary work “Othello”
and “The Phoenix and The Turtle.” 31. “Tom Jones,” “Amelia” and “Joseph Andrews” were
a. William Shakespeare authored by ____________.
b. Walt Whitman a. Henry Fielding
c. Johann David Wyss b. William Shakespeare
d. Matsuo Basho c. Edgar Allan Poe
d. Jane Austen
22. “Pride and Prejudice” was authored by ____________.
a. Jane Austen
b. Percy Shelley 32. ______________ is the author of the literary work “A Rose
c. William Shakespeare for Emily” and “The Sound and The Fury”
d. Estrella Alfon a. Francis Bacon
b. William Faulkner
23. ______________ is the author of the literary work “Easter c. Henryk Sienkiewicz
Wings” and “The Altar.” d. George Eliott
a. George Herbert
b. Henry Fielding 33. ______________ is the author of the literary works “Daniel
c. Robert Frost Deronda” and “Mill on The Floss.”
d. Edgar Lew Wallace a. Edgar Allan Poe
b. George Eliott
24. ______________ is the author of the literary work “Crime c. Francis Bacon
Punishment.” d. William Faulkner
a. Ernest Hemingway
b. Jane Austen 34. “Salammbo” and “Madame Bovary” were written by
c. Virgil ____________.
d. Fyodor Dostoyevsky a. Jonathan Swift
b. Sir Walter Scott
25. ______________ is the author of the literary work c. Gustave Flaubert
“Erewhon” and “Hudibras.” d. John Donne
a. Henry Fielding
b. William Blake 35. The Father of Literature and Poetry.
c. Robert Penn Warren a. Washington Irving
d. Samuel Butler b. William Shakespeare
c. Francis Bacon
26. The Father of Short Story. d. Geoffrey Chaucer
a. Francis Bacon
b. Michel de Montaigne 36. “The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed with the
c. Henry Fielding Sun” was authored by ____________.
d. Guy de Maupassant a. Turold
b. Jonathan Swift
27. “Ben Hur” is a story of Judah Ben-Hur, a Jewish nobleman c. William Blake
who was falsely accused and convicted of an attempted d. Henry David Thoreau
assassination of the Roman governor of Judaea. It was authored
by ____________. 37. ______________ is the author of the literary works “The
a. William Faulkner Road Not Taken” and “The Gift Outright.”
b. Alfred Lord Tennyson a. Robert Frost
c. Lew Wallace b. Harriet Beecher Stowe
d. William Ernest Henley c. Charles Dickens
d. William Wordsworth
28. __________ wrote “Jane Eyre.” She also wrote “Vilette,”
“Emma,” and “The Professor.” 38. The line 'Envy is ignorance and imitation is suicide' from the
a. Emily Bronte essay “Self-Reliance” is a quote of.
b. Charlotte Bronte a. Lew Wallace
c. Anne Bronte b. Ralph Waldo Emerson
d. Zane Grey c. Robert Frost
d. Thomas Paine
29. ______________ is the author of the literary works “My Last
Duchess” and “Fra Lippo Lippi.” 39. ______________ is the author of the literary works “Paradise
a. Robert Browning Lost” and “L'Allegro.”
b. Charles Brown a. Robert Frost
c. Henry David Thoreau b. Walt Whitman
d. Sir Walter Scott c. Thomas Paine
d. John Milton
30. ______________ is the author of the literary work “Arthur
Mervyn” and “Ormond” or The Secret Witness. 40. “Utopia” and “The Minstrel Boy” were authored by
a. Robert Browning ____________.
a. Samuel Butler c. John Milton
b. Edgar Lew Wallace d. Rudyard Kipling
c. Robert Penn Warren
d. Thomas Moore 50. The Father of American Short Story.
a. Washington Irving
41. “Gone With the Wind” a film in 1939 based on a novel of b. Francis Bacon
historical fiction, which received the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in c. Edgar Allan Poe
1937. It is a sweeping romantic story about the American Civil d. Henry Fielding
War from the point of view of the Confederacy written by
__________. 51. The father of Humanism of Renaissance who wrote
a. Toni Morrison “Canzoniere,” a collection of vernacular poems about a woman
b. Jane Austen named Laura, whom the speaker loves throughout his life but
c. Mary Shelley cannot be with. He also wrote “Triumphs” (Trionfi).
d. Margaret Mitchell a. Dante Alighieri
b. Boris Pasternak
42. The “Song of Roland” reflects the fight between Christianity c. Francesco Petrarch
and Islam, or good and evil, written by d. Giovanni Boccaccio
a. Francesco Petrarch
b. Turold 52. ______________ is the author of the literary works “Quo
c. Franz Kafka Davis” and “The Deluge.”
d. Henry David Thoreau a. Boris Pasternak
b. Fyodor Dostoyevsky
43. ______________ is the author of the literary works “As I Lay c. Henry David Thoreau
Dying,” “Absalom, Absalom!” and “Light in August.” d. Henryk Sienkiewicz
a. William Faulkner
b. Ernest Hemingway 53. Comprised of 80 lines, “Ode to a Nightingale” is the longest
c. Samuel Clemens of the great odes. Apart from being one of the most
d. Jonathan Swift anthologized poems in the English language, “Ode to a
Nightingale” is the most famous poem by
44. ______________ is the author of the literary works “The a. John Keats
Horla” and “Bel-Ami.” b. Jonathan Swift
a. Guy de Maupassant c. Henry Fielding
b. Robert Herrick d. Percy Shelley
c. Percy Shelley
d. Thomas Moore 54. ______________ is an Italian poet and scholar, best
remembered as the author of the earthy tales in the “The
45. “Hesperides” is a book of poetry published in 1648 by English Decameron.”
Cavalier poet ___________. a. Dante Alighieri
a. George Herbert b. Boris Pasternak
b. Robert Herrick c. Francesco Petrarch
c. William Ernest Henley d. Giovanni Boccaccio
d. Ernest Hemingway
55. ______________ is the author of the literary works “Riders of
46. ______________ is the author of the literary work “London” The Purple Sage” and “The Lone Star Ranger.”
and “A Poison Tree.” a. Alfred Lord Tennyson
a. William Blake b. Zane Grey
b. Valmiki c. Boris Pasternak
c. Leo Tolstoy d. William Wordsworth
d. Wole Soyinka
56. Among his best-known works are "Ozymandias" (1818), and
47. “Silas Marner” and “Middlemarch” was authored by "Ode to the West Wind" (1819).
____________. a. John Keats
a. Mark Twain b. Jonathan Swift
b. George Eliott c. Henry Fielding
c. Ernest Hemingway d. Percy Shelley
d. Ralph Waldo Emerson
57. ______________ is the author of the literary work “The
48. The show Big Brother takes its title from the famous novel Legend of Sleepy Hollow” and “Rip Van Winkle.”
“Nineteen Eighty-Four” by a. Washington Irving
a. Harriet Stowe b. Francis Bacon
b. George Orwell c. Edgar Allan Poe
c. George Eliott d. Henry Fielding
d. O. Henry
58. "Believe Me, if All Those Endearing Young Charms" is a
49. __________ is remembered for his stories and poems of popular song written by the Irish poet _________
British soldiers in India and for his tales for children. His poems a. John Milton
included “Mandalay,” “Gunga Din,” and “Kim.” b. Robert Frost
a. Robert Browning c. Thomas Paine
b. Sir Walter Scott d. Thomas Moore
67. He is famous for his novels “The Trial,” in which a man is
59. His most popular and celebrated work, “The Raven,” tells the charged with a crime that is never named, and “The
story of a scholar who encounters a raven that slowly drives him Metamorphosis,” in which the protagonist wakes to find himself
insane. People turn to this story because it offers a sense of transformed into an insect.
suspense that is rarely captured by other works in the literary a. Franz Kafka
world. b. Walt Whitman
a. Mark Twain c. Turold
b. Edgar Allan Poe d. Harriet Beecher Stowe
c. Jose Garcia Villa
d. Robert Browning 68. The most popular American poet in the 19th century, known
for such works as “The Song of Hiawatha” (1855) and “Paul
60. The theme of “The Story of My Life” by ____________ is the Revere's Ride” (1863).
power of perseverance to overcome great obstacles. She is a. William Wordsworth
struck with an illness when she is a very young child that makes b. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
her blind and deaf, and she exists in a world of confusion. c. Walt Whitman
a. Jane Austen d. Henryk Sienkiewicz
b. Helen Keller
c. Toni Morrison 69. ______________ was an Elizabethan poet and William
d. Mary Shelley Shakespeare's most important predecessor in English drama. The
Father of English Tragedy. His works were “The Jew of Malta”
61. “Ivanhoe” is the life of Sir Wilfred of Ivanhoe, a fictional and “Doctor Faustus.”
Saxon knight, a novel by _________ a. Geoffrey Chaucer
a. Sir Walter Scott b. Christopher Marlowe
b. Washington Irving c. William Wordsworth
c. John Keats d. Francesco Petrarch
d. Christopher Marlowe
70. ______________ is the author of the literary works “Uncle
62. __________ was an England-born political philosopher and Tom's Cabin.”
writer who supported revolutionary causes in America and a. Harriet Beecher Stowe
Europe. Published in 1776 to international acclaim, “Common b. Carl Friedrich Spitteler
Sense” was the first pamphlet to advocate American c. Alfred Lord Tennyson
independence. He also wrote “The American Crisis.” d. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
a. Robert Warren
b. Thomas Paine 71. A Scottish football team’s name influenced by “The Heart of
c. John Keats Midlothian,” of the same name, a novel by __________
d. Robert Herrick a. William Blake
b. Henryk Sienkiewicz
63. Russian poet whose novel “Doctor Zhivago” helped him win c. Boris Pasternak
the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1958 but aroused so much d. Sir Walter Scott
opposition in the Soviet Union that he declined the honor.
a. John Keats 72. ______________ is the author of the literary works “Stopping
b. Ben Johnson by Woods on a Snowy Evening,” “Birches,” “Mending Wall” and
c. Rudyard Kipling “Nothing Gold Can Stay.”
d. Boris Pasternak a. Robert Frost
b. Walt Whitman
64. ______________ is the author of the literary work “A Psalm c. Jonathan Swift
of Life.” d. Charles Dickens
a. William Wordsworth
b. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 73. "The Gift of the Magi" is a short story that tells the tale of a
c. Walt Whitman young husband and wife who long to give each other meaningful
d. Henryk Sienkiewicz Christmas presents by ___________
a. Robert Frost
65. His belief in nonviolence as a positive feature of Jesus' b. O. Henry
teaching characterized his beliefs. By directly influencing c. Johann David Wyss
Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. with this idea d. Leo Tolstoy
through his work “The Kingdom of God is Within You.”
a. Leo Tolstoy 74. “Gulliver’s Travel” is best known full-length work, and a
b. George Orwell classic of English literature. He claimed that he wrote it "to vex
c. Albert Camus the world rather than divert it".
d. William Faulkner a. William Wordsworth
b. Walt Whitman
66. ______________ is the author of the literary works c. Jonathan Swift
“Metzengerstein,” “The Bells” and “The Tell-Tale Heart.” d. Washington Irving
a. Fyodor Dostoyevsky
b. Edgar Allan Poe 75. ______________ is the author of the literary work “A Tale of
c. Robert Frost a Tub” and “A Modest Proposal”
d. Gustave Flaubert a. William Ernest Henley
b. Ernest Hemingway
c. William Wordsworth
d. Jonathan Swift d. Bronte Sisters
76. ______________ is the author of the literary work “O 85. 'Telephone Conversation' is a poem written by __________, a
Captain, My Captain” and “Leaves of Grass.” renowned African writer in English. The poem exposes the
a. Walt Whitman presence of racial discrimination at the individual level in society
b. Robert Penn Warren even after the passing of laws against it. The poem is a
c. Lew Wallace conversation between a white woman and a black man over the
d. Alfred Lord Tennyson telephone.
a. Lady Murasaki
77. ______________ is the author of the literary work “God Sees b. Natsume Soseki
the Truth But Waits” and “Anna Karenina” c. Wole Soyinka
a. Leo Tolstoy d. Elizabeth Bronte
b. Samuel Butler
c. Robert Louis Stevenson 86. ______________ is the author of the literary works “Treasure
d. Henry David Thoreau Island” and “The Body Snatcher.”
a. Alfred Lord Tennyson
78. ______________ is the most famous Haiku poet. His writing b. Robert Louis Stevenson
“The Narrow Road to the Deep North” is the most famous haiku c. Edgar Allan Poe
collection in Japan. d. George Orwell
a. Murasaki Shikibu
b. Naoki Higashida 87. ______________ is the author of the literary works “Venus
c. Matsuo Basho and Adonis,” “The Rape of Lucrece,” and “A Lover's Complaint.”
d. Ryunosuke Akutagawa a. Guy de Maupassant
b. William Shakespeare
79. “The Reason I Jump,” popular in Japan since it was published c. Harriet Beecher Stowe
in 2007. The author was 13 years old at the time he wrote the d. Geoffrey Chaucer
memoir, and nonverbal. He wrote by spelling out words on a
Japanese alphabet letter board. 88. Walden is a book by American transcendentalist writer
a. Murasaki Shikibu ____________
b. Naoki Higashida a. George Herbert
c. Matsuo Basho b. Christopher Marlowe
d. Ryunosuke Akutagawa c. John Keats
d. Henry David Thoreau
80. “The Tale of Genji” centers on the life and loves of a
handsome son, Hikaru Genji, born to an Emperor during the 89. ______________ is the author of the literary work “Tales of
Heian Period. In the story, the beloved concubine of the Emperor the Alhambra.”
gives birth to Genji and dies soon after. a. Washington Irving
a. Lady Murasaki b. Arthur Miller
b. Naoki Higashida c. Henry Fielding
c. Natsume Soseki d. Robert Herrick
d. Ryunosuke Akutagawa
90. ____________ was the grand old man of Victorian poetry,
81. ______________ is the father of Japanese short story. His holding the Laureateship for 42 years and famous for “In
notable works are “Kappa” and “Rashomon” Memoriam A.H.H.,” “The Idylls of The King and Maud,” and “The
a. Lady Murasaki Charge of the Light Brigade.”
b. Naoki Higashida a. Alfred Lord Tennyson
c. Natsume Soseki b. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
d. Ryunosuke Akutagawa c. Thomas Paine
d. William Blake
82. ______________ is the author of the short story “Hills Like
Elephants,” and novels “A Farewell to Arms” and “The Sun Also 91. “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud” was inspired by an event on
Rises.” 15 April 1802 in which the author and his younger sister Dorothy
a. Ernest Henley came across a "long belt" of daffodils while wandering in the
b. Gustave Flaubert forest.
c. Ernest Hemingway a. Thomas Paine
d. Albert Camus b. Percy Shelley
c. William Wordsworth
83. ______________ is the author of the literary work “Cask of d. Gustave Flaubert
Amontillado” and “Eldorado.”
a. Henry Fielding 92. ______________ is the author of the literary work “King
b. Edgar Allan Poe Lear” and “The Tempest.”
c. Rudyard Kipling a. Charles Dickens
d. Helen Keller b. William Shakespeare
c. William Wordsworth
84. ______________ is the author of the literary work “Tenant of d. John Donne
Wildfell Hall.”
a. Anne Bronte 93. ______________ is the author of the literary work “Crossing
b. Jane Austen The Bar.”
c. Helen Keller a. Alfred Lord Tennyson
b. Gustave Flaubert
c. William Faulkner 103. “Novum Organum” (The New Tool), described what came to
d. William Ernest Henley be called the Baconian Method of science. Published in 1620, it
was part of his Instauratio magna series of books.
94. He wrote “The Prelude” and “The World is Too Much With a. George Herbert
Us” b. Francis Bacon
a. Henry Fielding c. John Keats
b. Jonathan Swift d. Robert Frost
c. William Wordsworth
d. Washington Irving 104. ______________ wrote “Elegy Written in a Country
Churchyard.”
95. ______________ wrote the powerful allegoric-epic poem, in a. Oliver Goldsmith
iambic hexameters, “Olympischer Frühling” (Olympic Spring). b. Thomas Gray
a. Henry David Thoreau c. Edmund Spenser
b. Carl Friedrich Spitteler d. Laurence Sterne
c. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
d. Robert Herrick 105. ____________ published an exposition of the rules of the
classical school in the form of a poem “An Essay on Criticism.”
96. “All the King's Men” tells the story of charismatic populist a. Alexander Pope
governor Willie Stark and his political machinations in the b. Laurence Sterne
Depression-era Deep South. It was inspired by the real-life story c. Oliver Goldsmith
of U.S. Senator Huey P. Long, who was assassinated in 1935, d. Robert Penn Warren
written by
a. Ben Johnson 106. “She Stoops to Conquer” is a comedy of manners that
b. Ralph Waldo Emerson satirizes the 18th century aristocracy who is overly class
c. Robert Penn Warren conscious.
d. Thomas Moore a. Oliver Goldsmith
b. Thomas Gray
97. In “Love’s Labor’s Lost,” the comedy centers on four young c. Edmund Spenser
men who fall in love against their wills, written by d. Laurence Sterne
a. Carl Friedrich Spitteler
b. Washington Irving 107. ______________ combined fantasy and satire in “Alice’s
c. William Wordsworth Adventures in Wonderland” and ”Through a Looking Glass.”
d. William Shakespeare a. Charles Dickens
b. Lewis Carroll
98. Sonnet 18 — “Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?” c. Mark Twain
a. Carl Friedrich Spitteler d. Jane Austen
b. Washington Irving
c. William Wordsworth 108. His satire on manners like “Vanity Fair” with its protagonist,
d. William Shakespeare Becky Sharp.
a. William Faulkner
99. “The Crucible” is a dramatized and partially fictionalized b. William Makepeace Thackeray
story of the Salem witch trials that took place in the c. William Ernest Henley
Massachusetts Bay Colony during 1692–93. d. William Shakespeare
a. Arthur Miller
b. Fyodor Dostoyevsky 109. The author of “The Return of the Natives,” “Tess of
c. William Ernest Henley d’Urbervilles,” “Mayor of Casterbridge” and “Jude the Obscure.”
d. Leo Tolstoy a. Thomas Gray
b. Thomas Hardy
100. ___________ first novel, “Night Rider” (1939), is based on c. Edmund Spenser
the tobacco war (1905–08) between the independent growers in d. Laurence Sterne
Kentucky and the large tobacco companies.
a. Rudyard Kipling 110. ______________ is the author of the literary works
b. Laurence Sterne “Importance of Being Earnest” and “The Happy Prince.”
c. Oliver Goldsmith a. Oscar Wilde
d. Robert Penn Warren b. John Donne
c. John Galsworthy
101. ______________ wrote “Tristram Shandy.” d. George Herbert
a. Oliver Goldsmith
b. Thomas Gray 111. “The Forsyte Saga,” a series of novels which records the
c. Edmund Spenser changing values of such a family.
d. Laurence Sterne a. Oscar Wilde
b. John Donne
102. “The Faerie Queene” was composed in elaborate allegory in c. John Galsworthy
honor of the Queen of Fairyland (Queen Elizabeth I) d. George Herbert
a. Alexander Pope
b. Oliver Goldsmith 112. __________ was an anti-Victorian who echoed the
c. Edmund Spenser pessimism found in Thomas Hardy. He wrote “Shropshire
d. Laurence Sterne Lad.”
a. O. Henry a. The Battle of Maldon
b. H.G. Wells b. The Wanderer
c. E.M. Forster c. The Seafarer
d. A.E. Housman d. The Battle of Brunanburg
113. He wrote remarkable novels as “The Nigger of the 122. “I wish it need not have happened in my time,” said Frodo.
Narcissus” and “Lord Jim.” “So do I,” said Gandalf, “and so do all who live to see such times.
a. William Somerset Maugham But that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what
b. Joseph Conrad to do with the time that is given us.” A line from the novel “The
c. William Butler Yeats Fellowship of The Ring” by
d. John Galsworthy a. George R.R. Martin
b. J. K. Rowling
114. He is famous for “A Passage to India,” a c. J.R.R. Tolkien
novel that shows the lives of Englishmen in India. d. H.G. Wells
a. O. Henry
b. H.G. Wells 123. His “Of Human Bondage” portrays Philip Carey struggling
c. E.M. Forster against self-consciousness and embarrassment because of his
d. A.E. Housman cub-foot.
a. D.H. Lawrence
115. __________ is a historian best known for such science b. James Joyce
fiction novels as “The Time Machine” and “The War of the c. William Somerset Maugham
Worlds” and such comic novels as “Tono-Bungay” and “The d. Virginia Woolf
History.”
a. O. Henry 124. An Old English lyric recorded in the Exeter Book that begins
b. H.G. Wells by recounting in elegiac tone the perils of
c. E.M. Forster seafaring and ends with a praise of God.
d. A.E. Housman a. The Seafarer
b. The Wanderer
116. “Ecclesiastical History of the English People.” Written by c. Beowulf
__________ who is considered as the Father of English History d. The Battle of Maldon
and regarded as the greatest Anglo-Saxon scholar.
a. Virgil 125. ____________ is world-renown, for the powerful anti-
b. Venerable Bede Communist satire “Animal Farm.”
c. Toruld a. William Golding
d. Vyasa b. George Orwell
c. Anthony Burgess
117. “Fates of the Apostles,” “Juliana,” “Elene,” and “Christ II” or d. James Joyce
The Ascension. These Old English Christian poems were
popularized in the 8th century by _________ 126. "Once you've accepted your flaws, no one can use them
a. Venerable Bede against you."
b. Toruld a. George R.R. Martin
c. Thomas Mallory b. J. K. Rowling
d. Cynewulf c. J.R.R. Tolkien
d. H.G. Wells
118. “If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you, But make
allowance for their doubting too,” is a line by Rudyard Kipling 127. “Good Night, Good night! Parting is such sweet sorrow, that
from ______ I shall say good night till it be morrow.”
a. The Jungle Book a. Romeo and Juliet
b. Invictus b. As You Like It
c. If c. Merchant of Venice
d. Macbeth d. Hamlet
119. “One good thing about music, when it hits you, you feel no 128. “You have brains in your head. You have feet in your shoes.
pain.” You can steer yourself in any direction you choose. You're on
a. Elvis Presley your own, and you know what you know. And you are the guy
b. Bob Marley who'll decide where to go.”
c. Oprah Winfrey a. Mattie Stepanek
d. Steve Jobs b. Dr. Seuss
c. Lao Tzu
120. “History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second as farce.” d. Bob Marley
a. Karl Marx
b. Bob Marley 129. “It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done;
c. Jose Feliciano it is a far, far better rest I go to than I have ever known,” is a line
d. Elvis Presley by Charles Dickens from _______
a. The Tell-Tale Heart
121. This is a heroic old English poem that records, in b. A Tale of Two Cities
nationalistic tone, the triumph of the English c. I Wandered Lonely As a Cloud
against the combined forces of the Scots, Vikings and Britons in d. The Tempest
AD 937.
130. “If you prick us, do we not bleed? if you tickle us, do we not d. William Somerset Maugham
laugh? If you poison us, do we not die? And if you wrong us,
shall we not revenge? 139. _________ was the author of “Mrs. Dalloway” and “To the
a. Macbeth Lighthouse.”
b. Julius Caesar a. Virginia Woolf
c. The Merchant of Venice b. James Joyce
d. King Lear c. Aldous Huxley
d. Elizabeth Browning
131. “The Pilgrim’s Progress” is an allegory that shows Christian
tormented by spiritual anguish, written by 140. ___________ is considered by many to be the best of the
a. John Milton writers to emerge from the 1950s. He wrote “Lucky Jim.”
b. George Herbert a. Kingsley Amis
c. Robert Herrick b. Graham Greene
d. John Bunyan c. Anthony Burgess
d. Salman Rushdie
132. One of the earliest Christian poems preserved in the 10 th
century Vercelli book. The poem makes use 141. “Success is the sum of small efforts - repeated day in and
of dream vision to narrate the death and resurrection of Christ day out.”
from the perspective of the Cross or Rood itself. a. Robert Collier
a. The Battle of Maldon b. Kevyn Aucoin
b. The Seafarer c. Karl Marx
c. Dream of the Rood d. Lao Tzu
d. The Wanderer
142. ___________ wrote “Point Counter Point,” “Brave New
133. “A Modest Proposal” is a bitter pamphlet that ironically World,” and “After Many a Summer Dies the Swan” where he
suggests that the Irish babies be specially fattened for profitable showed his cynicism of the contemporary world.
sale as meat, since the English were eating the Irish people a. William Golding
anyhow – by heavy taxation. b. Aldous Huxley
a. Jonathan Swift c. George Orwell
b. Alexander Pope d. Graham Greene
c. Thomas Gray
d. Henry Fielding 143. _____________ wrote a long narrative poem about sinning
and redemption in “The Rime of the
134. “Happiness can be found, even in the darkest of times, if Ancient Mariner”
only one remembers to turn on the light,” -- Albus Dumbledore. a. William Wordsworth
a. Elvis Presley b. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
b. J. K. Rowling c. Charles Lamb
c. Jose Feliciano d. Sir Walter Scott
d. Bob Marley
144. The author such great novels as “Sons and Lovers,”
135. ______________ best-known poems is the mock-heroic “Women in Love,” “The Plumed Serpent,” and “Lady Chatterley’s
“Tam o' Shanter.” Lover.”
a. Horace Walpole a. O. Henry
b. Robert Burns b. H.G. Wells
c. Mary Shelley c. E.M. Forster
d. William Blake d. D.H. Lawrence
136. ____________ wrote the playful essay “Dissertation on 145. ___________ was an outspoken critic of the evils of his
Roast Pig.” He also rewrote many of Shakespeare’s time. He hoped for human perfection, but his recognition of
plays into stories for children in “Tales from Shakespeare.” man’s faults led him frequently to despair and disillusionment.
a. Percy Shelley He is much remembered for his poems: “Childe Harold’s
b. George Byron Pilgrimage,” “She Walks in Beauty,” and “The Prisoner of
c. John Keats Chillon.”
d. Charles Lamb a. George Byron
b. Percy Shelley
137. The lyric poem is composed of 115 lines of alliterative verse c. Alfred Tennyson
that reminisces a wanderer’s (eardstapa) past d. Robert Browning
glory in the company of his lord and comrades and his solitary
exile upon the loss of his kinsmen in battles. 146. An unlearned cowherd who was inspired by a vision and
a. Dream of the Rood miraculously acquired the gift of poetic song produced this nine-
b. The Seafarer line alliterative vernacular praise poem in honor of God.
c. Everyman a. Cædmon’s Hymn
d. The Wanderer b. Ballad
c. Sir Patrick Spens
138. ___________ wrote “Kidnapped,” “The Master of d. Everyman
Ballantrae” and “David Balfour.”
a. John Galsworthy 147. “Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant
b. A.E. Housman never taste of death but once.”
c. Robert Louis Stevenson a. Julius Caesar
b. Merchant of Venice c. Virginia Woolf
c. The Tempest d. Estrella Alfon
d. Othello
156. He was the Poet of the American Revolution who
148. “I'm not trying to be sexy. It's just my way of expressing incorporated the new stirrings of European Romanticism in his
myself when I move around.” lyric “The Wild Honeysuckle.”
a. Elvis Presley a. Washington Irving
b. J. K. Rowling b. Philip Freneau
c. Jose Feliciano c. James Cooper
d. Bob Marley d. Phillis Wheatley
149. Another heroic poem that recounts the fall of the English 157. He is the first African-American author who wrote of
army led by Birhtnoth in the hands of the religious themes. He is known in his “On Being Brought from
Viking invaders in AD 991. Africa to America.”
a. The Battle of Maldon a. William Bradford
b. The Battle of Brunanburg b. Phillis Wheatley
c. Dream of the Rood c. Anthony Burgess
d. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight d. Graham Greene
150. _____________ was an English novelist who wrote the 158. He wrote “Of Plymouth Plantation” and the first document
Gothic novel “Frankenstein,” or, The Modern Prometheus, which of colonial self-governance in the English New World, the
is considered an early example of science fiction. “Mayflower Compact.”
a. William Blake a. Edward Taylor
b. Samuel Taylor Coleridge b. Christopher Columbus
c. Charles Lamb c. Anthony Burgess
d. Mary Shelley d. William Bradford
151. _____________ was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature 159. “Civil Disobedience” was an inspiration for Mahatma
in 1983. His first novel, “Lord of the Flies” tells of a group of Gandhi’s Indian independence movement and Martin Luther
schoolboys who revert to savagery when isolated on an island. In King’s struggle for black Americans’ civil rights in the 20th
the novel, Golding explores naturalist and religious themes of century.
original sin. a. Henry David Thoreau
a. Graham Greene b. Walt Whitman
b. William Golding c. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
c. George Orwell d. Oliver Wendell Holmes
d. Anthony Burgess
160. He is known for novels of highly Catholic themes like
152. “A Clockwork Orange” is a 1971 dystopian crime film “Brighton Rock,” “The Heart of the Matter,” “The End of the
adapted, produced, and directed by Stanley Kubrick, based on Affair” and “The Power and the Glory.”
1962 novel of the same name by a. Graham Greene
a. Salman Rushdie b. Kingsley Amis
b. William Bradford c. Doris Lessing
c. Graham Greene d. Anthony Burgess
d. Anthony Burgess
161. He also wrote short lyrics like “The Jewish Cemetery at
153. He is a British-Indian novelist and essayist noted for his Newport,” “My Lost Youth,” and “The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls.”
“Midnight’s Children” and “The Satanic Verses” which a. Nathaniel Hawthorne
prompted Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini to issue a fatwa against b. Herman Melville
him, because Muslims considered the book blasphemous. c. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
In July 2008, “Midnight’s Children” won a public vote to be d. Edgar Allan Poe
named the Best of the Booker, the best novel to win the Booker
Prize in the award’s 40-year history. 162. “Moby-Dick” is his masterpiece. It is the epic story of the
a. William Bradford whaling ship Pequod and its “ungodly, god-like man,”
b. Edward Taylor Captain Ahab, whose obsessive quest for the white whale Moby-
c. Salman Rushdie Dick leads the ship and its men to destruction.
d. Jonathan Edwards a. Edgar Allan Poe
b. Nathaniel Hawthorne
154. The famous Italian explorer, funded by the Spanish rulers c. Herman Melville
Ferdinand and Isabella, wrote the “Epistola,” printed in 1493 d. Emily Dickinson
which recounts his voyages.
a. Christopher Columbus 163. “Leather Stocking” tales in which he introduced his
b. Captain John Smith renowned character Natty Bumppo, who embodies his vision of
c. William Bradford the frontiersman as a gentleman, a Jeffersonian “natural
d. Jonathan Edwards aristocrat.”
a. James Cooper
155. She wrote book “The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in b. Phillis Wheatley
America” (1650). c. Washington Irving
a. Doris Lessing d. Philip Freneau
b. Anne Bradstreet
164. He is a Zimbabwean-British writer, famous for novels “The b. Bret Harte
Grass is Singing” and “The Golden Notebook.” She won the c. Samuel Clemens
Nobel Prize for Literature in 2007. d. Jack London
a. Doris Lessing
b. Helen Keller 173. His best novels include “The House of Mirth,” “The Custom
c. Virginia Woolf of the Country,” “Summer,” “The Age of Innocence,” and the
d. Jane Austen novella “Ethan Frome.”
a. Stephen Crane
165. “The Portrait of a Lady” is the story of a spirited young b. Edith Wharton
American woman, Isabel Archer, who, "affronting her destiny," c. Willa Cather
finds it overwhelming. She inherits a large amount of money and d. Harriet Stowe
subsequently becomes the victim of Machiavellian scheming by
two American expatriates. 174. His best-sellers “The Call of the Wild” and “The Sea-Wolf”
a. Bret Harte made him the highest paid writer in the United States of his
b. Stephen Crane time.
c. Jack London a. Theodore Dreiser
d. Henry James b. Carl Sandburg
c. Edwin Robinson
166. “The Scarlet Letter,“ a novel, set in a village in Puritan New d. Jack London
England. The main character is Hester Prynne, a young woman
who has borne a child out of wedlock. Hester believes herself a 175. He is known for his dramatic monologues:
widow, but her husband, Roger Chillingworth, arrives in New “Luke Havergal,” about a forsaken lover;
England very much alive and conceals his identity. “Miniver Cheevy,” a portrait of a romantic dreamer; and
a. Nathaniel Hawthorne “Richard Cory,” a somber portrait of a wealthy man who
b. Herman Melville commits suicide.
c. Oliver Wendell Holmes a. Edwin Robinson
d. Harriet Beecher Stowe b. T.S. Eliot
c. Robert Frost
167. “Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. d. Wallace Stevens
Small people always do that, but the really great make you feel
that you, too, can become great.” 176. He wrote “The Love Song of J” and “The Waste Land.”
a. Edgar Allan Poe a. T.S. Eliot
b. Mark Twain b. F. Scott Fitzgerald
c. William Shakespeare c. Ernest Hemingway
d. Geoffrey Chaucer d. William Faulkner
168. A Puritan minister best known for his frightening, powerful 177. The author of “The Red Wheelbarrow.”
sermon, “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.” a. Edward Cummings
a. Jonathan Edwards b. John Steinbeck
b. Edward Taylor c. Sylvia Plath
c. Thomas Paine d. William Williams
d. Benjamin Franklin
178. He was recognized primarily for “The Red Badge of
169. “Forever is composed of nows.” Courage,” which has become an American classic. He is also
a. Edgar Allan Poe known for his short stories such as "The Open Boat," "The Blue
b. Henry Fielding Hotel," "The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky" and The Monster.”
c. Emily Dickinson a. Stephen Crane
d. Francis Bacon b. Jack London
c. Theodore Dreiser
170. “If you tell the truth, you don’t have to remember d. Henry James
anything.”
a. Nathaniel Hawthorne 179. The author of “The Jungle.”
b. Victor Hugo a. Hurson G. Wells
c. Walt Whitman b. William Golding
d. Mark Twain c. Upton Sinclair
d. Christopher Marlowe
171. “All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely
players. They have their exits and their entrances; And one man 180. __________ was an American writer known for her novels
in his time plays many parts.” of life on the Great Plains, including “O Pioneers!,” “The Song of
a. Geoffrey Chaucer the Lark,” and “My Ántonia.”
b. Rabindranath Tagore a. Edith Wharton
c. Vyasa b. Mary Shelley
d. William Shakespeare c. Willa Cather
d. Toni Morrison
172. ____________ is remembered as a local colorist and author
of adventurous stories such as “The Luck of Roaring Camp” and 181. ___________ was the author of “Daddy” about her father's
“The Outcasts of Poker Flat” set along the western mining death that occurred when she was eight years old and of her
frontier. ongoing battle trying to free herself from her father.
a. Henry James a. Sylvia Plath
b. Edith Wharton c. Henry Fielding
c. Jane Austen d. George Eliott
d. Willa Cather
191. His play “Desire Under the Elms” recreates the passions
182. __________ was among the first African American writers hidden within one family;
to protest white treatment of Blacks, notably in his novel “The Great God Brown” uncovers the unconsciousness of a
“Native Son” (1940) and his autobiography, “Black Boy” (1945). wealthy businessman; and his
a. Eugene O’Neill “Strange Interlude,” a winner of the Pulitzer Prize, traces the
b. Richard Wright tangled loves of one woman.
c. Arthur Miller a. Thornton Wilder
d. Tennessee Williams b. Eugene O’Neill
c. Tennessee Williams
183. His best-known books include “Main Street,” “Arrowsmith,” d. Arthur Miller
“Babbitt,” and “Dodsworth.” In 1930, he became the first U.S.
writer to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. 192. _____________ achieved huge literary success with the
a. Sinclair Lewis publication of his novel “The Catcher in the Rye” (1951).
b. Richard Wright a. Jack Kerouac
c. Arthur Miller b. Ralph Waldo Ellison
d. Tennessee Williams c. Norman Mailer
d. J.D. Salinger
184. The author of the novel “The Grapes of Wrath.”
a. Sinclair Lewis 193. She is the author of these great novels “The Bluest Eye,”
b. John Steinbeck “Sula,” and “Song of Solomon.”
c. William Faulkner a. Maya Angelou
d. Ernest Hemingway b. Eudora Welty
c. Alice Walker
185. His poetry is best known for its clear, visual images, fresh d. Toni Morrison
rhythms, and muscular, intelligent, unusual lines, such as the “In
a Station of the Metro.” 194. ____________ wrote “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings”
a. William Williams (1970) which celebrates mother-daughter connection.
b. Ezra Pound a. Maya Angelou
c. Edward Cummings b. Alice Walker
d. Langston Hughes c. Toni Morrison
d. Jane Austen
186. _____________ is known for his plays “Our Town” and “The
Skin of Our Teeth,” and for his novel “The Bridge 195. He is the only writer to win the National Book Award for
of San Luis Rey.” Fiction three times. His best-known works include “The
a. Thornton Wilder Adventures of Augie March,” “Henderson the Rain King,”
b. Ralph Waldo Ellison “Herzog,” “Mr. Sammler's Planet,” “Seize the Day,” “Humboldt's
c. Saul Bellow Gift” and “Ravelstein.”
d. Eugene O’Neill a. Saul Bellow
b. J.D. Salinger
187. He became famous for his “The Glass Menagerie” and c. John Barth
“A Streetcar Named Desire.” d. Jack Kerouac
a. John Barth
b. Tennessee Williams 196. She wrote “Ship of Fools” and “Flowering Judas.”
c. Toni Morrison a. Eudora Welty
d. Norman Mailer b. Zora Neale Hurston
c. Sylvia Plath
188. He is the author of the “Invisible Man” (1952) which is a d. Katherine Anne Porter
story of a black man who lives a subterranean existence in a hole
brightly illuminated by electricity stolen from a utility company. 197. In “Lost in the Funhouse,” he collects14 stories that
a. Ralph Waldo Ellison constantly refer to the processes of writing and reading.
b. Upton Sinclair a. John Barth
c. Hurson G. Wells b. Jack Kerouac
d. Henry James c. Thornton Wilder
d. Horace Walpole
189. Her most important work, “Their Eyes Were Watching God,”
is a moving, fresh depiction of a beautiful mulatto woman’s 198. The first work to call itself "Gothic" was “The Castle of
maturation and renewed happiness as she moves through three Otranto” (1764) by
marriages. a. Richard Wright
a. Ezra Pound b. John Barth
b. Willa Cather c. Horace Walpole
c. Sylvia Plath d. John Steinbeck
d. Zora Hurston
199. Her novel “The Optimist's Daughter” won the Pulitzer Prize
190. He is the author of “An American Tragedy.” in 1973. She also wrote “Why I Work at the P.O.”
a. William Golding a. Maya Angelou
b. Theodore Dreiser b. Eudora Welty
c. Katherine Anne Porter 208. ______________ is the author of the literary work “The
d. Alice Walker Pickwick Papers” and “Great Expectations.”
a. Samuel Butler
200. ___________ best-known novel, “On the Road,” describes b. Francis Bacon
‘beatniks’ wandering through America seeking an idealistic c. Harriet Beecher Stowe
dream of communal life and beauty. d. Charles Dickens
a. John Barth
b. Jack Kerouac 209. ______________ is the author of the literary work “Death
c. Ralph Ellison Be Not Proud.”
d. Norman Mailer a. John Donne
b. Robert Penn Warren
201. “The Great Gatsby,” third novel by American author c. Albert Camus
_____________, published in 1925. Set in Jazz Age New York. It d. George Eliott
tells the tragic story of Jay Gatsby, a self-made millionaire, and
his pursuit of Daisy Buchanan, a wealthy young woman whom he 210. Among his best-known works are "To a Skylark" (1820), and
loved in his youth. the political ballad "The Mask of Anarchy" (1819).
a. T.S. Eliot a. John Keats
b. F. Scott Fitzgerald b. Jonathan Swift
c. D.H. Lawrence c. Henry Fielding
d. A.E. Housman d. Percy Shelley
202. He is also famous for “The Executioner’s Song,” “Ancient 211. “To Kill a Mockingbird” is a 1961 novel by ___________. Set
Evenings,” and “Harlot’s Ghost.” in small-town Alabama, the novel chronicles the childhood of
a. Horace Walpole Scout and Jem Finch as their father Atticus defends a Black man
b. William Blake falsely accused of rape. Scout and Jem are mocked by their
c. Norman Mailer classmates for this.
d. Samuel Coleridge a. Harper Lee
b. Herman Melville
203. “The Lottery” is the best-known story of the American c. Miguel de Cervantes
writer ____________. Published in the New Yorker in 1948, the d. Oscar Wilde
story is about a village where an annual lottery is drawn.
However, the fate of the person who draws the 'winning' slip is 212. “Don Quixote” is a novel about a man and his 'squire' trying
only revealed at the end of the story in a dark twist. to prove that chivalry is not dead and aspiring to be heroes.
a. Shirley Jackson There are themes of chivalry, romance, and sanity in this two-
b. Mary Wollstonecraft part novel.
c. Toni Morrison a. Herman Melville
d. Maya Angelou b. George Orwell
c. J. D. Salinger
204. _____________ is an African-American who uses lyrical d. Miguel de Cervantes
realism in her epistolary dialect novel “The Color Purple” where
she exposes social problems and racial issues. 213. “One Hundred Years of Solitude” is a 1967 novel by
a. Alice Walker Colombian author _____________ that tells the multi-
b. Phillis Wheatley generational story of the Buendía family, whose patriarch, José
c. Toni Morrison Arcadio Buendía, founded the town of Macondo.
d. Mary Wollstonecraft a. Ralph Ellison
b. Gabriel García Márquez
205. He is considered as an innovator of narrative nonfiction c. Miguel de Cervantes
called “New Journalism in Miami” and the “Siege of Chicago.” d. Herman Melville
a. Jack Kerouac
b. Norman Mailer 214. _____________ was the author of “Invisible Man,” the story
c. J.D. Salinger of a young, college-educated black man struggling to survive and
d. Saul Bellow succeed in a racially divided society that refuses to see him as a
human being.
206. “The Yellow Wallpaper,” a semi-autobiographical short a. H.G. Wells
story dealing with mental health and contemporary social b. Gabriel García Márquez
expectations for women by c. Ralph Ellison
a. Charlotte Gilman d. J. D. Salinger
b. Alice Walker
c. Maya Angelou 215. She is the author of these great novels “Tar Baby” and
d. James Joyce “Beloved,” considered one of the greatest books ever written.
a. Toni Morrison
207. ______________ is the author of the literary work “A Book b. Eudora Welty
of Verses.” c. Alice Walker
a. Washington Irving d. Maya Angelou
b. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
c. William Ernest Henley 216. “Death of a Salesman,” a play in “two acts and a requiem”
d. Robert Browning by ___________
a. George Orwell
b. Arthur Miller
c. Jonathan Swift 225. “A Doll's House” is an 1879 play by Norwegian playwright
d. George Eliott __________
a. Hermann Hesse
217. "A Good Man Is Hard to Find" is a Southern gothic short b. Harper Lee
story first published in 1953 by author ___________ who, in her c. Henrik Ibsen
own words, described it as "the story of a family of six which, on d. Herman Melville
its way driving to Florida [from Georgia], gets wiped out by an
escaped convict who calls himself the ‘Misfit’." 226. The author of “Candide.”
a. Arthur Miller a. Voltaire
b. Flannery O'Connor b. Virgil
c. Harper Lee c. Vyasa
d. Eugene O’Neill d. Sophocles
218. The author of “Ulysses” and “A Portrait of the Artist as a 227. The film, “Life of Pi,” is a fictional story based on a novel of
Young Man.” the same name by _________
a. James Joyce a. Edmond Rostand
b. John Keats b. Yann Martel
c. Ralph Ellison c. Laura Esquivel
d. Herman Melville d. Rudolfo Anaya
219. “Night” is a 1960 memoir by __________ based on his 228. “Cyrano de Bergerac” is a play by _________ where the
Holocaust experiences with his father in the Nazi German main character (Cyrano) challenges anyone who mentions his
concentration camps at Auschwitz and Buchenwald in 1944– nose.
1945, toward the end of the Second World War in Europe. a. Edmond Rostand
a. Khaled Hosseini b. Paulo Coelho
b. Alan Paton c. Rudolfo Anaya
c. Henrik Ibsen d. John Hersey
d. Elie Wiesel
229. His masterpiece “The Alchemist,” tells the mystical story of
220. “The Kite Runner” is the story of Amir, a Sunni Muslim, who Santiago, an Andalusian shepherd boy who yearns to travel in
struggles to find his place in the world because of the search of a worldly treasure.
aftereffects and fallout from a series of traumatic childhood a. Mark Mathabane
events. b. Voltaire
a. Elie Wiesel c. Edmond Rostand
b. Khaled Hosseini d. Paulo Coelho
c. Ralph Ellison
d. Harper Lee 230. “In Search of Lost Time,” first translated into English as
Remembrance of Things Past, and sometimes referred to in
221. “Cry, the Beloved Country” is a 1948 novel by ___________. French as La Recherche, is a novel in seven volumes by French
Set in the prelude to apartheid in South Africa, it follows a black author __________
village priest and a white farmer who must deal with news of a a. Marcel Proust
murder. b. Paulo Coelho
a. Alan Paton c. F. Scott Fitzgerald
b. Hermann Hesse d. Herman Melville
c. Henrik Ibsen
d. Elie Wiesel 231. One Thousand and One Nights is a collection of Middle
Eastern folk tales compiled in Arabic during the Islamic Golden
222. __________ is a Chinese American writer and novelist. In Age. It is often known in English as the Arabian Nights,
1985, she wrote the story "Rules of the Game," which was the translated by __________
foundation for her first novel “The Joy Luck Club.” a. Marcel Proust
a. Zhang Ailing b. Paulo Coelho
b. Maya Angelou c. Mark Mathabane
c. Amy Tan d. Antoine Galland
d. Harper Lee
232. “Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde” is a Gothic novella
223. “Antigone,” was a sequel to one of the greatest tragedies by Scottish author ___________. In the story, Jekyll tries to
ever written where the main character killed his father and control his alter ego, Hyde, and for a while, Jekyll has the power.
married his mother. However, towards the end of the novel, Hyde takes over and this
a. Virgil results in their deaths.
b. Sophocles a. Alfred Tennyson
c. William Shakespeare b. Robert Penn Warren
d. Voltaire c. Robert Louis Stevenson
d. George Gordon Byron
224. Siddhartha was written by ___________
a. Henrik Ibsen 233. ___________ was a Scottish physician and writer who is
b. Alan Paton most noted for his fictional stories about the detective ‘Sherlock
c. Hermann Hesse Holmes.’ He is also known for his novel “B. 24.”
d. Ralph Ellison a. Edmond Rostand
b. Arthur Conan Doyle
c. Mark Mathabane b. H.G. Wells
d. Antoine Galland c. E.M. Forster
d. A.E. Housman
234. “The Signal-Man” is an eerie ghost story about a railway
signal-man who is haunted by foreboding, spectral visions.
a. Charles Dickens Prepared By: Joshua Mañoza
b. Robert Browning
c. Oscar Wilde
d. O. Henry