A | B |
Lyrical Ballads | this work of literature can be used to mark the beginning of the English Romantic Era |
Gray | this is not one of the poets to dominate the English Romantic Era |
French Revolution | major social event inspired the Romantic writers and threatened the ruling aristocracy in England |
Industrial Revolution | this major social event drastically changed life in England |
love | this is not an association one should make with the word "Romantic" as it applies to this era |
highlights darker aspects of Romanticism | how does Gothic literature differ from the "regular" literature of Romanticism |
simple country folk | whom does Gray write about in the poem, "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard |
symbols | "The Tyger" and "The Lamb", function as what in the poem |
the Church | which institution does Blake challenge in the "Chimney Sweeper" poems |
plot, characters and story line | which quality is evident in the "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner", but is not typically Romantic |
Personification | what figure of speech is used, "and chased us south along" |
change | "mutability" is about which central concept |
ode | this poem is relatively long and complex, usually addressed to someone or something, written in a serious tone |
powerful | how is the West Wind characterized in "Ode to the West Wind" |
Classical myth | Frankenstein cannot be classified as this |
allusion | "the land of mist and snow", is what figure of speech |
knowledge | this does not bring the creature pleasure |
Victor's journal | the creature finds this in a pocket of his clothes |
the creature | which character does Mary Shelley intend her reader to view with the most sympathy |
murder of Henry | why is Victor arrested |