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23. On the whole , _______ 's poetry is one of experiencess . His heroes are more or less surrogates of himself . Childe Harold 's Pilgrimage is such an example .
A. William Blake
B. William Wordsworth
C. George Gordon Byron
D. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
24. Chronologically the Victorian period roughly coincides with the reign of _______ who ruled over England from 1836 to 1901 .
A. Queen Victoria
B. Queen Elizabeth I
C. King Henry VIII
D. King Edward VI
25. Modernism is , in any aspects , a reaction against _______. It rejects rationalism , which is the theoretical base of realism .
A. romanticism
B. humanism
C. sybolism
D. realism
26. In 1948 , T.S. Eliot's book ___________ won the prize for Literature .
A. The Sketch Book
B. The Faerie Queen
C. The Waste Land
D. Four Quartets
27. In early nineteenth century , Washington Irving wrote ______ which became the first work by an American writer to earn an interantional reputation .
A. Nature
B. The Sketch Book
C. The Scalet Letter
D. Leaves of Grass
28. The Aemrican Transcendalists formed a club called “____________” .
A. the Transcendental Club
B. the Sentimental Club
C. the Romantic Club
D. the Symbolic Club
29. Samuel Lanhorne Clemens is better known by the pen name ______ .
A. Theodore Dreiser
B. Heman Melville
C. Esene O'Neil
D. Mark Twain
30. After Apple-Picking is a well-known poem written by ______ .
A. Robert Lee Frost
B. Ezra Pound
C. Walt Whitman
D. T.S. Eliot
31. Generally the Renaissance refers to the period between the 14th and mid-17th centuries . It first started in Italy , with the flowering of painting , sculpture and literature . From _______ the movement went to embrace the rest of Europe .
A. Germany
B. Greek
C. Britain
D. Italy
32. Milton's Paradise Lost took its material from _______ .
A. the Bible
B. Greek myth
C. Roman myth
D. French romance
33. By the middle of Elizabeth's reign in England , Protestantism has been firmly established , with a certain extent of compromise between Gatholicism and _______ .
A. Protestantism
B. Neoclassicism
C. Transcentalism
D. Imagism