English Test 1140
John Keats
"On First Looking into Chapman's Homer"
Percy Shelley
"Ozymandias"
sonnet
"Ozymandias" and "On First Looking into Chapman's Homer" are examples of this literary form
Lord Byron
"The Destruction of Sennacherib"
Percy Shelley
"To a Skylark"
familiar essay
A major prose innovation of the Romantic Period was the ____.
prose lyric
Another term for a familiar essay is _____.
octave and sestet
Fourteen-line sonnets have two major parts:
three
List the ____ critical decisions everyone must make: Accepting Jesus as your personal savior. Finding God's choice of marriage partner. Finding God's choice career.
human emotions
Reason was as important to neoclassicists as ______.
lyricisms
Romantic Period authors used ____ to make their writing musical and personal.
historical novel
Sir Walter Scott's major contribution to the Romantic Period
Romans 14:12
So then every one of us shall give account of himself to God.
romantics
The Middles Ages were a great source of inspiration for ____.
familiar
The term ___ style refers to prose that is simple, natural, and straightforward.
Romantic Period
The years 1789-1832 were called the _____, which was an era of literary revolution.
poet laureate
William Wordsworth held this distinguished position
Wesleyan revivals
_____ directly influenced British government and quickened social reform.
Reform Bill of 1832
_____ was the high point of the British reform movement.
heroism
a leading theme of many of Lord Byron's work
William Hazlitt
a writer of essays along with Thomas de Quincy and Charles Lamb
profuse
abundant
summary
always has fewer words than the original passage or poem
affectation
behavior that is not natural
raven
black
bourn
brook
blithe
cheerful
Sir Walter Scott
contributed a great deal to the restoration of Scotland's national culture and literature
annihilate
destroy
pedantic
displaying one's knowledge more than is necessary
cataclysmic
eventful
sprite
fairy
sprightly
full of life
premonitory
giving warning beforehand
William Hazlitt
he introduced the term, familiar style
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
he wrote "Water, water, everywhere And all the boards did shrink; Water, water, everything. Nor a drop to drink."
Lord Byron
he wrote the beautiful sonnet that begins, "She walks in beauty, like the night"
Thomas Moore
he wrote the poem, "The Glory of God in Creation"
paraphrase
is an expanded version of the original passage or poem
John Keats
is known for the words, "A thing of beauty is a joy forever."
ballad
literary form of "The Destruction of Sennacherib"
fraught
loaded
fealty
loyalty
archaic
no longer in use in ordinary language
symmetry
order
quintessence
purest form of some quality
propriety
quality of being proper
culminate
reaching climax
summary
restates only the main idea of a passage or poem
paraphrase
retains the author's sequence of ideas
paraphrase
retains, in alternate words, all of the author's ideas
allusion
slight of incidental mention of something
demesne
territory
ballad
the literary form of The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
William Wordsworth
the poet who wrote the famous poem about his experience with daffodils
pensive
thinking
rectitude
uprightness
ambrosial
very fragrant
vista
view
sallow
willow
William Blake
wrote the poem entitle "The Tiger"
Percy Shelley
wrote the poem with the words, "Bird though never wert,"