sonnet quiz
"Their" and "they" (line 8) refer to which of the following?
"every word" (line 7)
The image of "Crooked eclipses" (line 7) is most closely linked to which other image in the poem?
"the main of light" (line 5)
The poem's final two lines do which of the following?
Present a simile that resolves a contradiction described in the preceding lines
Line 10 ("And you . . . argument") identifies which of the following about the speaker?
The abiding theme of his personal and literary focus
Which of the following best describes the structure of the poem as a whole?
Three increasingly ominous representations of a process, followed by an optimistic assertion
Line 12, "And nothing stands but for his scythe to mow," is best paraphrased as
everything exists only to be destroyed
In line 6, the word "Crawls" serves primarily to
evoke both a baby's movements and the idea that in youth the years pass slowly
In line 12, the speaker compares the expression of romantic love to
financial transactions
The subject of lines 1-4 is best described as the
minutes of our lives elapsing
The overall tone of the poem is best described as
purposeful and heartfelt
The questions in the first eight lines of the poem primarily serve to
set up an assertion about the nature of the poet's love
The image presented in line 11 ("So all . . . new") most significantly implies the speaker's
skill in presenting the same thoughts in numerous poems
Which of the following best characterizes the development of the poem as a whole?
The speaker acknowledges a weakness in his writing, only to turn this weakness into a means of affirming his devotion to his beloved.
The action of the waves in lines 1-4 is best described as
an inexorable procession
In context, the question in line 5 ("Why write . . . ever the same") conveys the speaker's
apparent self-reproach for using poetic diction he has used before
In lines 5-8 ("Why write . . . proceed?"), the speaker most clearly implies that his poems
are easily recognizable as his because of their literary features
In context, the phrase "transfix the flourish" (line 9) is best understood to mean
diminish the vitality
In line 5, "Nativity" refers primarily to the
earliest stage of life
The first twelve lines of the poem primarily focus on the
relentlessness of time
The verbs in lines 9-12—"transfix," "delves," "Feeds on," and "mow"—serve to dramatize
time's absolute control over human life