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英国文学史复习资料整理

2016-10-18 13:43:56 来源网站: 百味书屋

篇一:英国文学史复习资料整理 (1)

? historical background: the making of Britain

A. Briton (Celtic tribes)

B. the Roman Conquest---Roman Briton

1th Julius Caesar

A.D.43 Claudius

C. mid-5th Anglo-Saxons (Angles, Saxons, Jutes)

Anglo-Saxon period

D. Danish invasion

late 8th, Danes

late 9th, Alfred the Great

the literature

the literature of this period falls naturally isto two divisions—pagan and Christian

pagan represents the poetry which the Anglo-Saxons probably brought with them in the form of oral sagas

Christian represents the writings developed under teaching of the monks..

All of the earliest poetry of England was copied by the monks, and seems to have been more or less altered to give it a religious coloring.

The angles, an important Teutonis tribe, furnished the name for the new home, which was called Angle-land afterward shortened into England. The language spoken by these tribes is generally called Anglo-Saxon or Saxon.

Literary term

★ Epic: a long narrative poem telling about the deeds of a great hero and reflecting the values of the society from which it originated. Many epics were drawn from an oral tradition and were transmitted by song and recitation before they were written down.

(examples: Iliad, Odyssey, Chanson de Roland)

2. Beowulf– national epic

★ the longest and most monument of A-S poems

★ the oldest surviving epic in British literature.

? oral form (6th), earliest written record (7th or 8th)

? set in Denmark and Sweden

Beowulf

1. 3183 lines

2. contents:

Beowulf centers on the narration of the exploits of the heroic figure beowulf.

3 adventures

Monster---Grendel

Grendel’s mother

fiery dragon

Theme: primitive people’s struggle against hostile forces of the natural world under a wise and mighty leader.

Beowulf is not simply a man of great military prowess but he is forever eager to help others in distress and in his last adventure with the dragon he shows himself a worthy leader ready to sacrifice his own life for the welfare of his people.

Features:

* part-historical and part legendary

* heathen tribal society, feudal elements, Christian coloring *A-S or old English; alliteration metaphor

In the year 1066, at the battle of Hastings, the Normans headed by William, Duke of Normandy, defeated the Anglo-Saxons.

Brought to England is remarkable for its bright, romantic tales of love and adventure.

England literature is also a combination of French and Saxon elements.

The three chief effects of the conquest were

1. the bringing of Roman civilization to England

2. the growth of nationality a strong centralized government, instead of the loose union of Saxon tribes

3. the new language and literature were proclaimed in Chaucer

1 the Norman conquest accelerated the development of feudalism. ? on land: the ruling class possessed large tracts of land

? on society: distinct class division, miseries of peasants

? on language: scholar wrote in French and Latin; eiched English.

The development of romance and knights’ legends

★ Romance: A long composition, sometimes in verse, sometimes in prose, describing the life and adventures of a noble man. The central character is the Knight, who has a noble birth, is skillful in the use of weapon and devotes to the church or King. The rules governing the manners and morals of a knight are known as chivalry.

? Themes of romance:

the matter of Britain— king Arthur and his knights of the Round Table (Arthurian romances)

the matter of France— Charlemagne and his knights (Chanson de

Roland)

the matter of Rome— from the Trojan War to Alexander the Great

King Arthur:

* historical figure of Celts; mythological figure in Welsh literature; * legendary hero in

? Geoffery of Monmouth: “History of the Kings of Britain” ? Layamon: “Brut”

? Sir Tomas Malory: “Le Morte D?Arthur”

? Anglo-Saxon

? Later legends about a hero named Arthur were placed in this period of violence. The invaders were variously Angles, Saxons, Frisians, Jutes, but were similar in culture and eventually identified themselves indifferently as Angles or Saxons.

The most outstanding single romance on the Arthurian legend— ―Sir Gawain and the Green Knight‖ (four sections)

a.The fight between Sir Gawain and the Green Knight at King Arthur?s Christmas feast.

b. Gawain?s adventures on the way to find the Green Knight of the Green Chapel

篇二:英国文学史及选读__复习要点总结

《英国文学史及选读》第一册复习要点

1. Beowulf: national epic of the English people; Denmark story; alliteration, metaphors and understatements (此处可能会有填空,选择等小题)

2. Romance (名词解释)

3. “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”: a famous roman about King Arthur’s story

4. Ballad(名词解释)

5. Character of Robin Hood

6. Geoffrey Chaucer: founder of English poetry; The Canterbury Tales (main contents; 124 stories planned, only 24 finished; written in Middle English; significance; form: heroic couplet)

7. Heroic couplet (名词解释)8. Renaissance(名词解释)9.Thomas More——Utopia

10. Sonnet(名词解释)11. Blank verse(名词解释)12. Edmund Spenser“The Faerie Queene”

13. Francis Bacon “essays” esp. “Of Studies”(推荐阅读,学习写正式语体的英文文章的好参照,本文用词正式优雅,多排比句和长句,语言造诣非常高,里面很多话都可以引用做格言警句,非常值得一读)

14. William Shakespeare四大悲剧比较重要,此外就是罗密欧与朱立叶了,这些剧的主题,背景,情节,人物形象都要熟悉,当然他最重要的是Hamlet这是肯定的。他的sonnet也很重要,最重要属sonnet18。(其戏剧中著名对白和几首有名的十四行可能会出选读)

15. John Milton 三大史诗非常重要,特别是Paradise Lost和Samson Agonistes。对于Paradise Lost需要知道它是blank verse写成的,故事情节来自Old Testament,另外要知道此书theme和Satan的形象。

16. John Bunyan——The Pilgrim’s Progress

17. Founder of the Metaphysical school——John Donne; features of the school: philosophical poems, complex rhythms and strange images.

18. Enlightenment(名词解释)

19. Neoclassicism(名词解释)

20. Richard Steele——“The Tatler”

21. Joseph Addison——“The Spectator”这个比上面那个要重要,注意这个报纸和我们今天的报纸不一样,它虚构了一系列的人物,以这些人物的口气来写报纸上刊登的散文,这一部分要仔细读。

22. Steel’s and Addison’s styles and their contributions

23. Alexander Pope: “Essay on Criticism”, “Essay on Man”, “The Rape of Lock”, “The Dunciad”; his workmanship (features) and limitations

24. Jonathan Swift: “Gulliver’s Travels”此书非常重要,要知道具体内容,就是Gulliver游历过的四个地方的英文名称,和每个部分具体的讽刺对象; (我们主要讲了三个地方) “A Modest Proposal”比较重要,要注意作者用的irony也就是反讽手法。

25. The rise and growth of the realistic novel is the most prominent achievement of 18th century English literature.

26. Daniel Defoe: “Robinson Crusoe”, “Moll Flanders”, 当然是Robinson Crusoe比较重要,剧情要清楚, Robinson Crusoe的形象和故事中蕴涵的早期黑奴的原形,以及殖民主义的萌芽。另外注意Defoe的style和feature,另外Defoe是forerunner of English realistic novel。

27. Samuel Richardson——“Pamela” (first epistolary novel), “Clarissa Harlowe”, “Sir Charles Grandison”

28. Hey Fielding: “Joseph Andrews”, “Jonathan Wild”, “Tom Jones”第一个和第三个比较重要,需要仔细看。他是一个比较重要的作家,另外Fielding也被称为father of the English novel.

29. Laurence Sterne——“Tristram Shandy”项狄传

30. Richard Sheridan——“The School for Scandal”

31. Oliver Goldsmith——“The Traveller”(poem), “The Deserted Village” (poem) (both two poems were written by heroic couplet), “The Vicar of Wakefield” (novel), “The Good-Natured Man” (comedy), “She stoops to Conquer” (comedy),

“The Citizen of the World” (collection of essays)

32. Sentimentalism(名词解释)

33. Thomas Gray——“Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”(英国诗歌里非常著名的一首,曾经被誉为“有史以来英国诗歌里最好的一首”)(a representative of sentimentalism and graveyard school of poets墓园派诗人)

* Graveyard School / Poets”: A term applied to eighteenth-century poets who wrote meditative poems, usually set in a graveyard, on the theme of human mortality, in moods which range from elegiac pensiveness to profound gloom. The vogue resulted in one of the most widely known English poems, Thomas Gray’s “Elegy written in a country churchyard”. The writing of graveyard poems spread from England to Continental literature in the second part of the century and also influenced some American poets.

34. In the latter half of the 18th century, Pre-Romanticism; representative: William Blake and Robert Burns.

35. Thomas Percy——“Reliques of Ancient English poetry”许多中古的民谣都是在这个时期重新收集和整理起来的,这个集子是那个时代比较有名的一个民谣集。

36. William Blake比较重要,需要对主要作品有所了解,特别是Songs of Innocence 和 Songs of Experience, 这两本集子的contrast一定要注意,另外Blake的写作特点也要注意,比如语言的简单明了,神秘主义氛围等。

37. Robert Burns伟大的苏格兰民族诗人, A Red Red Rose, Scots Wha Hae, Auld Lang Syne等名诗,写作特点: Scottish dialect; a poet of peasant and Scottish people; plain language; influence from Scottish folk songs and ballads; musical quality of his poems.

《英国文学史及选读》第二册练习题

I. 浪漫主义时期

I. Each of the statements below is followed by four alternative answers. Choose the one that would best complete the statement and put the letter in the brackets.

1. English Romanticism is generally said to have begun with__A_in 1798.

A. the publication of Lyrical Ballads

B. the death of Sir Scott

C. the birth of William Wordsworth

D. the passage of the first Reform Bill in the Parliament

2. The Romantic Period is first of all an age of__B___.

A. Novel B. poetry C. drama D. prose

3. Romanticism does not emphasize__D___.

A. the special qualities of each individual’s mind

B. the inner world of the human spirit

C. individuality

D. the features that men have in common

4.___B__ is not a Romantic poet.

A. William BlakeB. Sir ScottC. P. B. ShelleyD. Lord Byron

5. _C____ is a Romantic novelist but is impressed with neo-classic strains.

A. Walter Scott B. Mary Shelley

C. Jane Austen D. Ann Radcliff

6. ____C_ is not characteristic of William Blake’s writing.

A. plain and direct languageB. compression of meaning

C. supernatural quality D. symbolism

7. Wordsworth published Lyrical Ballads in 1789 with __B___.

A. Byron B. Coleridge C. Shelley D. Keats

8. Wordsworth thinks that _D____ is the only subject of literary interest.

A. the life of rising bourgeoisie

B. aristocratic life

C. the life of the royal family

D. common life

9. Don Juan is the masterpiece of__A___.

A. Lord Byron’s B. P. B. Shelley’sC. John Keats’s D. Samuel Coleridge’s

10. _A____ is not a novel written by Jane Austen.

A. Jane Eyre B. Sense and SensibilityC. Pride and Prejudice D. Emma

II. Complete each of the following statements with a proper word or a phrase according to the textbook.

1. In essence, Romanticism designates a literary and philosophical theory which tends to see the__.individual ___as the very center of all life and all experience.

2. For the Romantics, _ human life ____ is not only the major source of poetic imagery, but also provides the dominant subject matter.

3. Wordsworth is regarded as a “worshipper of _ nature ____.”

4. According to the subjects, Wordsworth’s short poems can be classified into two groups: poems about nature and poems about ____ human life _.

5. Coleridge’s achievement as poet can be divided into two remarkably diverse groups: _.the demonic ____ and the conversational.

6. As a leading Romanticist, Byron’s chief contribution is his creation of the “_ Byronic hero ____.”

7. “__ Ode to the West Wind ___” is Shelley’s representative work.

8. __ The odes ___ are generally regarded as Keats’s most important and mature work.

9. “Beauty is truth, truth beauty” is a famous line in Keats’s “__ Ode on a Grecian Urn ___.”

10. _ Pride and Prejudice ____is the most delightful of Jane Austen’s work.

III. Decide whether the following statements are true or false and write your answers in the brackets.

( T )1. The Romantic period is also a great age of prose.

( T )2. Romantics also tend to be nationalistic, defending their own literary heritage against the advocates of classical rules.

( F )3. Coleridge has been rewarded as Poet Laureate.

( F)4. Keats is one of the “Lake Poets.”

( F )5. Jane Austen is a typical Romantic writer.

IV. Name the author of each of the following literary work.

1. “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” Coleridge

2. Songs of InnocenceBlake

3. “Ode to a Nightingale”Keats

4. “A Song: Men of England”Shelley

5. The PreludeWordsworth

V. Define the literary terms listed below

1. Romanticism

Romanticism is a movement that flourished in literature, philosophy, music and art in western culture during most of the nineteenth century, beginning as a revolt against classicism. There have been many varieties of Romanticism in many

different times and places. The leading features of Romantic movements are Wordsworth, Shelley, etc.

2. Ode

Ode is a complex and often lengthy lyric poem, written in a dignified formal style on some lofty or serious subject. Odes are often written for a special occasion, to honour a person or a season or to commemorate an event.

VI. For each of the quotations listed below please give the name of the author and the title of the literary work from which it is taken and then briefly interpret it.

1….Be through my lips to unawakened Earth.

The trumpet of a prophecy! O, Wind,

If winter comes, can Spring be far behind?

1. It is taken from Shelley’s Ode to the West Wind. In this poem, Shelley eulogizes the powerful west wind and expresses his eagerness to enjoy the boundless freedom from the reality. In these last lines, the poet shows his optimistic spirit for the future.

2. For oft, when on my couch I lie

In vacant or in pensive mood,

They flash upon that inward eye

Which is the bliss of solitude;

And then my heart with pleasure fills,

And dances with the daffodils.

2. It is taken from Wordsworth’s “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud.” The poet thinks that it is a bliss to recollect the beauty of nature in his mind while he is in solitude. He expresses his strong affecting for nature in the poem

.

II.维多利亚时期

I. Each of the statement below is followed by four alternative answers. Choose the one that would best complete the statement and put the letter in the brackets

1. The Victorian period roughly began at the enthronement of Queen Victoria in__B___.

A. 1835 B. 1836 C. 1837 D. 1838

2. The critical realists like Charles Dickens in the Victorian period wrote novels__D___.

A. representing the 18th century realist novel B. criticizing the society C. defending the mass

E. all the above

3. ___D__is not a Victoria novelist.

A. Charles DickensB. George Eliot C. William Makepeace ThackerayD. D. H. Lawrence

4. ___C__ is not a work by Charles Dickens.

A. Oliver Twist B. David CopperfieldC. MiddlemarchD. A Tale of Two Cities

5. Wuthering Heights is a masterpiece written by___B__.

A. Charlotte BronteB. Emily Bront C. Anne BronteD. Branwell Bronte

6. __A___ is not Thomas Hardy’s work.

A. The Mill on the Floss C. Jude the ObscureD. The Mayor of Casterbridge

7. “My Last Duchess” is __A___.

A. a dramatic monologueB. a short lyricC. a novelD. an essay

8. Tennyson’s “Ulysses” gets its inspiration from the following works or writers except_B____.

A. Homer’s OdesseyB. Joyce’s Ulysses C. Dante D. Greek Mythology

9. In the 19th century English literature, a new literary trend _D____ appeared. And it flourished in the 1840s and in the early 1950s.

A. romanticism B. naturalism C. realism D. critical realism

10. The title of the novel Vanity Fair was taken from__A___.

A. The Pilgrim’s Progress B. Childe Harold’s PilgrimageC. Gulliver’s TravelsD. The Canterbury Tales II. Complete each of the following statements with a proper word or a phrase according to the textbook

1. The aestheticists such as Oscar Wilde in the Victorian period advocated the theory of “_ art for art’s sake ____.”

2. In the Victorian period, _ the novel ____became the most widely read and the most vital and challenging expression of progressive thought.

3. Charles Dickens is one of the greatest _ critical realist ____ writers of the Victorian Age.

4. Tennyson’s poem “__ Break, Break, Break ___” is in memory of his bosom friend Arthur Hallam.

5. Robert Browning is famous for his _ dramatic monologue ____.

6. George Eliot’s __ Middlemarch ___ is one of the most mature works in English literature.

7. Tennyson’s famous dramatic monologue based on the story in Greek Mythology is “_ Ulysses ____.”

8. __ Oliver Twist ___ is Dickens’ first child hero.

9. Jane Eyre represents those_ middle ____-class working women who are struggling for recognition of their basic rights and equality as a human being.

10. The most important poet of the Victorian Age was_ Tennyson____. Next to him were Robert Browning and his wife.

III. Decide whether the following statements are true of false and write your answers in the brackets.

( T )1. The Victorian period has been generally regarded as one of the most glorious in the English history.

( F )2. Tennyson is famous for his aesthetic viewpoint of “art for art’s sake.”

( F )3. Wuthering Heights is the masterpiece of Charlotte Bronte’s.

( F ) 4. Browning’s “Meeting at Night” and “Parting at Morning” were originally one poem in dramatic monologue. ( T )5. Naturalism has played an important part in Thomas Hardy’s work.

IV. Name the author of each of the following literary works.

1. The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club Charles Dickens

2. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall Anne Bronte

3. In Memoriam Alfred Tennyson

4. The Mill on the Floss George Eliot

5. The Return of the NativeThomas Hardy

V. Define the literary terms listed below.

1. Dramatic Monologue

Dramatic Monologue is a kind of narrative poem in which one character speaks to one or more listeners whose replies are not given in the poem. The occasion is usually a crucial one In the speaker’s personality as well as the incident that is the subjects of the poem. An example of a dramatic monologue is “My Last Duchess” by Robert Browning.

2. Critical Realism

Critical Realism is a literary movement in the 19th century. It sticks to the principal of faithful representation of the 18th century realistic novel and carries its duty forward to the criticism of the society and the defense of the mass. The representative figures are Dickens, the Bronte’s, etc

篇三:英国文学史及选读 复习要点总结

《英国文学史及选读》第一册复习要点

1. Beowulf: national epic of the English people; Denmark story; alliteration, metaphors and understatements (此处可能会有填空,选择等小题)

2. Romance (名词解释)

3. “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”: a famous roman about King Arthur’s story

4. Ballad(名词解释)

5. Character of Robin Hood

6. Geoffrey Chaucer: founder of English poetry; The Canterbury Tales (main contents; 124 stories planned, only 24 finished; written in Middle English; significance; form: heroic couplet)

7. Heroic couplet (名词解释)8. Renaissance(名词解释)9.Thomas More——Utopia

10. Sonnet(名词解释)11. Blank verse(名词解释)12. Edmund Spenser“The Faerie Queene”

13. Francis Bacon “essays” esp. “Of Studies”(推荐阅读,学习写正式语体的英文文章的好参照,本文用词正式优雅,多排比句和长句,语言造诣非常高,里面很多话都可以引用做格言警句,非常值得一读)

14. William Shakespeare四大悲剧比较重要,此外就是罗密欧与朱立叶了,这些剧的主题,背景,情节,人物形象都要熟悉,当然他最重要的是Hamlet这是肯定的。他的sonnet也很重要,最重要属sonnet18。(其戏剧中著名对白和几首有名的十四行诗可能会出选读)

15. John Milton 三大史诗非常重要,特别是Paradise Lost和Samson Agonistes。对于Paradise Lost需要知道它是blank verse写成的,故事情节来自Old Testament,另外要知道此书theme和Satan的形象。

16. John Bunyan——The Pilgrim’s Progress

17. Founder of the Metaphysical school——John Donne; features of the school: philosophical poems, complex rhythms and strange images.

18. Enlightenment(名词解释)

19. Neoclassicism(名词解释)

20. Richard Steele——“The Tatler”

21. Joseph Addison——“The Spectator”这个比上面那个要重要,注意这个报纸和我们今天的报纸不一样,它虚构了一系列的人物,以这些人物的口气来写报纸上刊登的散文,这一部分要仔细读。

22. Steel’s and Addison’s styles and their contributions

23. Alexander Pope: “Essay on Criticism”, “Essay on Man”, “The Rape of Lock”, “The Dunciad”; his workmanship (features) and limitations

24. Jonathan Swift: “Gulliver’s Travels”此书非常重要,要知道具体内容,就是Gulliver游历过的四个地方的英文名称,和每个部分具体的讽刺对象; (我们主要讲了三个地方) “A Modest Proposal”比较重要,要注意作者用的irony也就是反讽手法。

25. The rise and growth of the realistic novel is the most prominent achievement of 18th century English literature.

26. Daniel Defoe: “Robinson Crusoe”, “Moll Flanders”, 当然是Robinson Crusoe比较重要,剧情要清楚, Robinson Crusoe的形象和故事中蕴涵的早期黑奴的原形,以及殖民主义的萌芽。另外注意Defoe的style和feature,另外Defoe是forerunner of English realistic novel。

27. Samuel Richardson——“Pamela” (first epistolary novel), “Clarissa Harlowe”, “Sir Charles Grandison”

28. Hey Fielding: “Joseph Andrews”, “Jonathan Wild”, “Tom Jones”第一个和第三个比较重要,需要仔细看。他是一个比较重要的作家,另外Fielding也被称为father of the English novel.

29. Laurence Sterne——“Tristram Shandy”项狄传

30. Richard Sheridan——“The School for Scandal”

31. Oliver Goldsmith——“The Traveller”(poem), “The Deserted Village” (poem) (both two poems were written by heroic couplet), “The Vicar of Wakefield” (novel), “The Good-Natured Man” (comedy), “She stoops to Conquer” (comedy),

“The Citizen of the World” (collection of essays)

32. Sentimentalism(名词解释)

33. Thomas Gray——“Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”(英国诗歌里非常著名的一首,曾经被誉为“有史以来英国诗歌里最好的一首”)(a representative of sentimentalism and graveyard school of poets墓园派诗人)

* Graveyard School / Poets”: A term applied to eighteenth-century poets who wrote meditative poems, usually set in a graveyard, on the theme of human mortality, in moods which range from elegiac pensiveness to profound gloom. The vogue resulted in one of the most widely known English poems, Thomas Gray’s “Elegy written in a country churchyard”. The writing of graveyard poems spread from England to Continental literature in the second part of the century and also influenced some American poets.

34. In the latter half of the 18th century, Pre-Romanticism; representative: William Blake and Robert Burns.

35. Thomas Percy——“Reliques of Ancient English poetry”许多中古的民谣都是在这个时期重新收集和整理起来的,这个集子是那个时代比较有名的一个民谣集。

36. William Blake比较重要,需要对主要作品有所了解,特别是Songs of Innocence 和 Songs of Experience, 这两本集子的contrast一定要注意,另外Blake的写作特点也要注意,比如语言的简单明了,神秘主义氛围等。

37. Robert Burns伟大的苏格兰民族诗人, A Red Red Rose, Scots Wha Hae, Auld Lang Syne等名诗,写作特点: Scottish dialect; a poet of peasant and Scottish people; plain language; influence from Scottish folk songs and ballads; musical quality of his poems.

《英国文学史及选读》第二册练习题

I. 浪漫主义时期

I. Each of the statements below is followed by four alternative answers. Choose the one that would best complete the statement and put the letter in the brackets.

1. English Romanticism is generally said to have begun with_____in 1798.

A. the publication of Lyrical Ballads

B. the death of Sir Scott

C. the birth of William Wordsworth

D. the passage of the first Reform Bill in the Parliament

2. The Romantic Period is first of all an age of_____.

A. Novel B. poetry C. drama D. prose

3. Romanticism does not emphasize_____.

A. the special qualities of each individual’s mind

B. the inner world of the human spirit

C. individuality

D. the features that men have in common

4._____ is not a Romantic poet.

A. William BlakeB. Sir ScottC. P. B. ShelleyD. Lord Byron

5. _____ is a Romantic novelist but is impressed with neo-classic strains.

A. Walter Scott B. Mary Shelley

C. Jane Austen D. Ann Radcliff

6. _____ is not characteristic of William Blake’s writing.

A. plain and direct languageB. compression of meaning

C. supernatural quality D. symbolism

7. Wordsworth published Lyrical Ballads in 1789 with _____.

A. Byron B. Coleridge C. Shelley D. Keats

8. Wordsworth thinks that _____ is the only subject of literary interest.

A. the life of rising bourgeoisie

B. aristocratic life

C. the life of the royal family

D. common life

9. Don Juan is the masterpiece of_____.

A. Lord Byron’s B. P. B. Shelley’sC. John Keats’s D. Samuel Coleridge’s

10. _____ is not a novel written by Jane Austen.

A. Jane Eyre B. Sense and SensibilityC. Pride and Prejudice D. Emma

II. Complete each of the following statements with a proper word or a phrase according to the textbook.

1. In essence, Romanticism designates a literary and philosophical theory which tends to see the_____as the very center of all life and all experience.

2. For the Romantics, _____ is not only the major source of poetic imagery, but also provides the dominant subject matter.

3. Wordsworth is regarded as a “worshipper of _____.”

4. According to the subjects, Wordsworth’s short poems can be classified into two groups: poems about nature and poems about _____.

5. Coleridge’s achievement as poet can be divided into two remarkably diverse groups: _____ and the conversational.

6. As a leading Romanticist, Byron’s chief contribution is his creation of the “_____.”

7. “_____” is Shelley’s representative work.

8. _____ are generally regarded as Keats’s most important and mature work.

9. “Beauty is truth, truth beauty” is a famous line in Keats’s “_____.”

10. _____is the most delightful of Jane Austen’s work.

III. Decide whether the following statements are true or false and write your answers in the brackets.

( )1. The Romantic period is also a great age of prose.

( )2. Romantics also tend to be nationalistic, defending their own literary heritage against the advocates of classical rules.

( )3. Coleridge has been rewarded as Poet Laureate.

( )4. Keats is one of the “Lake Poets.”

( )5. Jane Austen is a typical Romantic writer.

IV. Name the author of each of the following literary work.

1. “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”

2. Songs of Innocence

3. “Ode to a Nightingale”

4. “A Song: Men of England”

5. The Prelude

V. Define the literary terms listed below

1. Romanticism

2. Ode

VI. For each of the quotations listed below please give the name of the author and the title of the literary work from which it is taken and then briefly interpret it.

1….Be through my lips to unawakened Earth.

The trumpet of a prophecy! O, Wind,

If winter comes, can Spring be far behind?

2. For oft, when on my couch I lie

In vacant or in pensive mood,

They flash upon that inward eye

Which is the bliss of solitude;

And then my heart with pleasure fills,

And dances with the daffodils.

Keys:

I. 1.A 2.B 3.D 4.B 5.C 6.C 7.B 8.D 9.A 10.A

II.1.individual 2. human life3.nature4.human life

5.the demonic6.Byronic hero 7. Ode to the West Wind

8. The odes 9. Ode on a Grecian Urn 10. Pride and Prejudice

III. 1.T 2.T 3.F 4.F 5.F

IV. 1.Coleridge2. Blake 3. Keats 4. Shelley 5. Wordsworth

V. 1. Romanticism is a movement that flourished in literature, philosophy, music and art in western culture during most of the nineteenth century, beginning as a revolt against classicism. There have been many varieties of Romanticism in many different times and places. The leading features of Romantic movements are Wordsworth, Shelley, etc.

2. Ode is a complex and often lengthy lyric poem, written in a dignified formal style on some lofty or serious subject. Odes are often written for a special occasion, to honour a person or a season or to commemorate an event.

VI. 1. It is taken from Shelley’s Ode to the West Wind. In this poem, Shelley eulogizes the powerful west wind and expresses his eagerness to enjoy the boundless freedom from the reality. In these last lines, the poet shows his optimistic spirit for the future.

2. It is taken from Wordsworth’s “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud.” The poet thinks that it is a bliss to recollect the beauty of nature in his mind while he is in solitude. He expresses his strong affecting for nature in the poem.

II.维多利亚时期

I. Each of the statement below is followed by four alternative answers. Choose the one that would best complete the statement and put the letter in the brackets

1. The Victorian period roughly began at the enthronement of Queen Victoria in_____.

A. 1835 B. 1836 C. 1837 D. 1838

2. The critical realists like Charles Dickens in the Victorian period wrote novels_____.

A. representing the 18th century realist novel B. criticizing the society C. defending the mass

E. all the above

3. _____is not a Victoria novelist.

A. Charles DickensB. George Eliot C. William Makepeace ThackerayD. D. H. Lawrence

4. _____ is not a work by Charles Dickens.

A. Oliver Twist B. David CopperfieldC. MiddlemarchD. A Tale of Two Cities

5. Wuthering Heights is a masterpiece written by_____.

A. Charlotte BronteB. Emily Bront C. Anne BronteD. Branwell Bronte

6. _____ is not Thomas Hardy’s work.

A. The Mill on the Floss C. Jude the ObscureD. The Mayor of Casterbridge

7. “My Last Duchess” is _____.

A. a dramatic monologueB. a short lyricC. a novelD. an essay

8. Tennyson’s “Ulysses” gets its inspiration from the following works or writers except_____.

A. Homer’s OdesseyB. Joyce’s Ulysses C. Dante D. Greek Mythology

9. In the 19th century English literature, a new literary trend _____ appeared. And it flourished in the 1840s and in the early 1950s.

A. romanticism B. naturalism C. realism D. critical realism

10. The title of the novel Vanity Fair was taken from_____.

A. The Pilgrim’s Progress B. Childe Harold’s PilgrimageC. Gulliver’s TravelsD. The Canterbury Tales II. Complete each of the following statements with a proper word or a phrase according to the textbook

1. The aestheticists such as Oscar Wilde in the Victorian period advocated the theory of “_____.”

2. In the Victorian period, _____became the most widely read and the most vital and challenging expression of progressive thought.

3. Charles Dickens is one of the greatest _____ writers of the Victorian Age.

4. Tennyson’s poem “_____” is in memory of his bosom friend Arthur Hallam.

5. Robert Browning is famous for his _____.

6. George Eliot’s _____ is one of the most mature works in English literature.

7. Tennyson’s famous dramatic monologue based on the story in Greek Mythology is “_____.”

8. _____ is Dickens’ first child hero.

9. Jane Eyre represents those_____-class working women who are struggling for recognition of their basic rights and equality as a human being.

10. The most important poet of the Victorian Age was_____. Next to him were Robert Browning and his wife. III. Decide whether the following statements are true of false and write your answers in the brackets.

( )1. The Victorian period has been generally regarded as one of the most glorious in the English history.

( )2. Tennyson is famous for his aesthetic viewpoint of “art for art’s sake.”

( )3. Wuthering Heights is the masterpiece of Charlotte Bronte’s.

( ) 4. Browning’s “Meeting at Night” and “Parting at Morning” were originally one poem in dramatic monologue.

( )5. Naturalism has played an important part in Thomas Hardy’s work.

IV. Name the author of each of the following literary works.

1. The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club

2. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall

3. In Memoriam

4. The Mill on the Floss

5. The Return of the Native

V. Define the literary terms listed below.

1. Dramatic Monologue

2. Critical Realism

VI. For each of the quotations listed below please give the name of the author and the title of the literary work from which it is taken and then briefly interpret it.

1. That same evening the gentleman in the white waistcoat most positively and decidedly affirmed, not only that Oliver would be hung, but that he would be drawn and quartered into the bargain. Mr. Bumble shoot his head with gloomy mystery, and said he wished he might come to good; where—unto Mr. Gamfield replied, that he wished he might come to him---which, although he agreed with the beadle in most matters, would seem to be a wish of a totally opposite description.

The next morning, the public were once more informed that Oliver Twist was again To Let, and that five pounds would be paid to anybody who would take possession of him.

2. Thus, neither having the clue to the other’s secret, they were respectively puzzled at what each revealed, and awaited

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