British Poetry in English Literature MCQs for UGC NET|GATE :Moderate Level

British Poetry MCQs for UGC NET/GATE (Moderate Level)

BRITISH DRAMA MCQS (CLICK HERE)

1. Who wrote the poem "The Waste Land"?

A) W.B. Yeats

B) T.S. Eliot

C) Ezra Pound

D) Dylan Thomas

Answer: B) T.S. Eliot

Explanation: Published in 1922, "The Waste Land" is T.S. Eliot's landmark modernist poem depicting post-WWI disillusionment.

2. Which Romantic poet wrote "Ode to a Nightingale"?

A) William Wordsworth

B) Samuel Taylor Coleridge

C) John Keats

D) Percy Bysshe Shelley

Answer: C) John Keats

Explanation: Keats composed this ode in 1819, exploring themes of mortality, transcendence, and the power of imagination.

3. In which century did Geoffrey Chaucer write "The Canterbury Tales"?

A) 12th century

B) 14th century

C) 16th century

D) 18th century

Answer: B) 14th century

Explanation: Chaucer wrote this seminal Middle English work between 1387-1400, establishing English as a literary language.

4. Which metaphysical poet wrote "The Flea"?

A) John Donne

B) George Herbert

C) Andrew Marvell

D) Henry Vaughan

Answer: A) John Donne

Explanation: Donne's conceit compares sexual union to mingling blood in a flea, exemplifying metaphysical wit.

5. What is the rhyme scheme of a Shakespearean sonnet?

A) abba abba cde cde

B) abab cdcd efef gg

C) aabb ccdd eeff gg

D) abab bcbc cdcd ee

Answer: B) abab cdcd efef gg

Explanation: This 14-line structure with a final couplet distinguishes the English/Shakespearean sonnet from Petrarchan form.

6. Who wrote the poem "Dulce et Decorum Est"?

A) Siegfried Sassoon

B) Rupert Brooke

C) Wilfred Owen

D) Isaac Rosenberg

Answer: C) Wilfred Owen

Explanation: Owen's graphic WWI poem (1917) ironically subverts Horace's dictum "it is sweet and honorable to die for one's country."

7. Which poem begins "Tyger Tyger, burning bright"?

A) The Lamb

B) The Tyger

C) London

D) The Chimney Sweeper

Answer: B) The Tyger

Explanation: This famous opening from Blake's "Songs of Experience" questions the nature of the Creator through the tiger's fearful symmetry.

8. Who is considered the first major poet in English literature?

A) William Langland

B) Geoffrey Chaucer

C) John Gower

D) The Pearl Poet

Answer: B) Geoffrey Chaucer

Explanation: Called the "father of English literature," Chaucer's vernacular poetry established English as a literary language.

9. Which Victorian poet wrote "The Lady of Shalott"?

A) Robert Browning

B) Alfred Lord Tennyson

C) Matthew Arnold

D) Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Answer: B) Alfred Lord Tennyson

Explanation: Tennyson's 1832/1842 Arthurian poem explores isolation, art, and doomed love through its tragic heroine.

10. What poetic form is used in Milton's "Paradise Lost"?

A) Heroic couplets

B) Blank verse

C) Spenserian stanzas

D) Ottava rima

Answer: B) Blank verse

Explanation: Milton's epic uses unrhymed iambic pentameter, elevating English blank verse to new heights.

11. Which poem contains the lines "Beauty is truth, truth beauty"?

A) Ode to Psyche

B) Ode on a Grecian Urn

C) Ode to Autumn

D) Ode to Melancholy

Answer: B) Ode on a Grecian Urn

Explanation: These famous concluding lines from Keats' ode encapsulate his aesthetic philosophy.

12. Who wrote the modernist long poem "The Cantos"?

A) T.S. Eliot

B) Ezra Pound

C) W.H. Auden

D) Wallace Stevens

Answer: B) Ezra Pound

Explanation: Pound's unfinished 120-section work (1915-1962) incorporates multiple languages and historical references.

13. Which poet is associated with the "Lake District"?

A) William Wordsworth

B) Samuel Taylor Coleridge

C) Robert Southey

D) All of the above

Answer: D) All of the above

Explanation: These three poets formed the "Lake Poets" school, drawing inspiration from the Lake District's natural beauty.

14. What is the primary theme of Philip Larkin's "This Be The Verse"?

A) Nature's beauty

B) Parental failure

C) Religious doubt

D) War's futility

Answer: B) Parental failure

Explanation: Larkin's famously begins: "They fuck you up, your mum and dad," exploring generational damage.

15. Which Anglo-Saxon poem features the character Beowulf?

A) The Wanderer

B) Beowulf

C) The Seafarer

D) The Dream of the Rood

Answer: B) Beowulf

Explanation: This epic poem (c. 700-1000 AD) recounts the Geatish hero's battles with Grendel and a dragon.

16. Who wrote "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner"?

A) William Wordsworth

B) Samuel Taylor Coleridge

C) John Keats

D) Lord Byron

Answer: B) Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Explanation: Coleridge's 1798 ballad explores themes of guilt, redemption, and the supernatural through a sailor's tale.

17. Which poet wrote "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock"?

A) W.B. Yeats

B) T.S. Eliot

C) Ezra Pound

D) Wallace Stevens

Answer: B) T.S. Eliot

Explanation: Eliot's 1915 modernist poem presents an aging man's interior monologue and social anxiety.

18. What is the meter of Spenser's "The Faerie Queene"?

A) Iambic pentameter

B) Spenserian stanza

C) Heroic couplet

D) Blank verse

Answer: B) Spenserian stanza

Explanation: Spenser invented this nine-line form (8 iambic pentameters + 1 alexandrine) for his epic allegory.

19. Which poem begins "Because I could not stop for Death"?

A) I heard a Fly buzz - when I died

B) Success is counted sweetest

C) Because I could not stop for Death

D) There's a certain Slant of light

Answer: C) Because I could not stop for Death

Explanation: Emily Dickinson's poem personifies Death as a courteous carriage driver taking the speaker to eternity.

20. Who wrote "The Second Coming"?

A) W.B. Yeats

B) T.S. Eliot

C) Seamus Heaney

D) Dylan Thomas

Answer: A) W.B. Yeats

Explanation: Yeats' 1919 poem contains the famous lines "Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold."

21. Which poet wrote "Ozymandias"?

A) John Keats

B) Percy Bysshe Shelley

C) Lord Byron

D) William Wordsworth

Answer: B) Percy Bysshe Shelley

Explanation: Shelley's 1818 sonnet meditates on the transience of power through a ruined statue in the desert.

22. What is the primary theme of Andrew Marvell's "To His Coy Mistress"?

A) Religious devotion

B) Carpe diem

C) Pastoral beauty

D) Political satire

Answer: B) Carpe diem

Explanation: This metaphysical poem urges the beloved to love now, using time's passage as persuasion.

23. Which war poet wrote "Anthem for Doomed Youth"?

A) Rupert Brooke

B) Siegfried Sassoon

C) Wilfred Owen

D) Isaac Rosenberg

Answer: C) Wilfred Owen

Explanation: Owen's sonnet (1917) contrasts battlefield deaths with traditional funeral rites.

24. Who wrote the sonnet sequence "Amoretti"?

A) William Shakespeare

B) Edmund Spenser

C) Philip Sidney

D) Michael Drayton

Answer: B) Edmund Spenser

Explanation: Spenser's 89-sonnet sequence (1595) chronicles his courtship of Elizabeth Boyle.

25. Which poem contains the lines "Water, water, everywhere/Nor any drop to drink"?

A) Kubla Khan

B) The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

C) Christabel

D) Dejection: An Ode

Answer: B) The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

Explanation: These famous lines describe the mariner's predicament after killing the albatross.

26. Who is the author of "The Prelude"?

A) William Wordsworth

B) Samuel Taylor Coleridge

C) John Keats

D) Lord Byron

Answer: A) William Wordsworth

Explanation: Wordsworth's autobiographical epic (completed 1805, published 1850) explores "the growth of a poet's mind."

27. Which poet wrote "The Tyger" and "The Lamb"?

A) William Blake

B) William Wordsworth

C) Samuel Taylor Coleridge

D) John Clare

Answer: A) William Blake

Explanation: These companion poems appear in Blake's "Songs of Innocence and Experience" (1789/1794).

28. What is the primary theme of John Donne's "Holy Sonnet 10" ("Death be not proud")?

A) Romantic love

B) Death's impotence

C) Religious doubt

D) Political power

Answer: B) Death's impotence

Explanation: Donne's sonnet argues death is merely a temporary sleep before eternal life.

29. Which modernist poet wrote "The Hollow Men"?

A) Ezra Pound

B) T.S. Eliot

C) W.B. Yeats

D) Wallace Stevens

Answer: B) T.S. Eliot

Explanation: Eliot's 1925 poem contains the famous ending "This is the way the world ends/Not with a bang but a whimper."

30. Who wrote "Goblin Market"?

A) Elizabeth Barrett Browning

B) Christina Rossetti

C) Emily Dickinson

D) Charlotte Mew

Answer: B) Christina Rossetti

Explanation: Rossetti's 1862 narrative poem explores temptation, sisterhood, and redemption through fairy-tale imagery.

31. Which poem begins "Let us go then, you and I"?

A) The Waste Land

B) The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock

C) The Hollow Men

D) Four Quartets

Answer: B) The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock

Explanation: This opening line introduces Eliot's dramatic monologue of urban alienation.

32. Who is the speaker in Robert Browning's "My Last Duchess"?

A) The poet himself

B) The Duke of Ferrara

C) A Renaissance artist

D) The Duchess's ghost

Answer: B) The Duke of Ferrara

Explanation: Browning's dramatic monologue reveals the Duke's possessive nature through his comments on a portrait.

33. Which poet wrote "Fern Hill"?

A) W.H. Auden

B) Dylan Thomas

C) Philip Larkin

D) Ted Hughes

Answer: B) Dylan Thomas

Explanation: Thomas' 1945 poem nostalgically recalls childhood summers in Wales with its "green and golden" imagery.

34. What is the primary theme of W.H. Auden's "Musée des Beaux Arts"?

A) The persistence of suffering

B) The beauty of nature

C) The horrors of war

D) The power of love

Answer: A) The persistence of suffering

Explanation: Auden reflects on Bruegel's paintings to show how human suffering occurs amid life's continuance.

35. Which Romantic poet wrote "Ode: Intimations of Immortality"?

A) William Wordsworth

B) Samuel Taylor Coleridge

C) John Keats

D) Percy Bysshe Shelley

Answer: A) William Wordsworth

Explanation: Wordsworth's ode (1807) explores childhood's divine vision fading with maturity.

36. Who wrote "The Defence of Poesy"?

A) Philip Sidney

B) Edmund Spenser

C) Ben Jonson

D) John Dryden

Answer: A) Philip Sidney

Explanation: Sidney's 1585 critical treatise defends poetry's moral and imaginative value against Puritan attacks.

37. Which poem contains the lines "I wandered lonely as a cloud"?

A) Tintern Abbey

B) The Prelude

C) I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud

D) Resolution and Independence

Answer: C) I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud

Explanation: Wordsworth's famous lyric (1807) describes encountering a field of daffodils and their lasting memory.

38. Who is the author of "The Faerie Queene"?

A) Geoffrey Chaucer

B) Edmund Spenser

C) John Milton

D) William Shakespeare

Answer: B) Edmund Spenser

Explanation: Spenser's unfinished epic (1590-96) allegorizes virtues through Arthurian romance.

39. Which metaphysical poet wrote "The Collar"?

A) John Donne

B) George Herbert

C) Andrew Marvell

D) Henry Vaughan

Answer: B) George Herbert

Explanation: Herbert's poem (1633) dramatizes spiritual rebellion and submission through its title's double meaning.

40. Who wrote "In Memoriam A.H.H."?

A) Alfred Lord Tennyson

B) Robert Browning

C) Matthew Arnold

D) Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Answer: A) Alfred Lord Tennyson

Explanation: Tennyson's elegy (1850) for Arthur Hallam explores grief, doubt, and evolutionary science over 131 sections.

41. Which poem begins "Earth has not anything to show more fair"?

A) Composed upon Westminster Bridge

B) Tintern Abbey

C) The World Is Too Much With Us

D) London, 1802

Answer: A) Composed upon Westminster Bridge

Explanation: Wordsworth's sonnet (1802) captures London's beauty at dawn, unusual for his typically rural subjects.

42. Who wrote "The Sun Rising"?

A) John Donne

B) Andrew Marvell

C) George Herbert

D) Henry Vaughan

Answer: A) John Donne

Explanation: Donne's metaphysical poem playfully chides the sun for interrupting lovers in their private world.

43. Which war poet wrote "The Soldier"?

A) Wilfred Owen

B) Siegfried Sassoon

C) Rupert Brooke

D) Isaac Rosenberg

Answer: C) Rupert Brooke

Explanation: Brooke's patriotic sonnet (1914) idealizes death abroad as enriching "some corner of a foreign field."

44. Who wrote "Piers Plowman"?

A) Geoffrey Chaucer

B) William Langland

C) John Gower

D) The Pearl Poet

Answer: B) William Langland

Explanation: This Middle English allegorical dream vision (c. 1370-90) critiques contemporary religious and social corruption.

45. Which poem contains the lines "And miles to go before I sleep"?

A) The Road Not Taken

B) Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening

C) Mending Wall

D) After Apple-Picking

Answer: B) Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening

Explanation: Frost's deceptively simple lyric (1923) suggests life's obligations before final rest.

46. Who wrote "The Garden of Proserpine"?

A) Dante Gabriel Rossetti

B) Algernon Charles Swinburne

C) Christina Rossetti

D) Gerard Manley Hopkins

Answer: B) Algernon Charles Swinburne

Explanation: Swinburne's 1866 poem expresses weariness with life and longing for oblivion through Persephone's myth.

47. Which modernist poet wrote "Hugh Selwyn Mauberley"?

A) T.S. Eliot

B) Ezra Pound

C) W.B. Yeats

D) Wallace Stevens

Answer: B) Ezra Pound

Explanation: Pound's 1920 sequence critiques contemporary culture through the failed poet Mauberley's persona.

48. Who wrote "The Darkling Thrush"?

A) Thomas Hardy

B) Gerard Manley Hopkins

C) A.E. Housman

D) Rudyard Kipling

Answer: A) Thomas Hardy

Explanation: Hardy's 1900 poem contrasts winter's bleakness with a thrush's hopeful song at century's end.

49. Which poem begins "That's my last Duchess painted on the wall"?

A) My Last Duchess

B) Porphyria's Lover

C) The Bishop Orders His Tomb

D) Fra Lippo Lippi

Answer: A) My Last Duchess

Explanation: Browning's dramatic monologue begins with the Duke showing a visitor his late wife's portrait.

50. Who wrote "The Windhover"?

A) Gerard Manley Hopkins

B) Alfred Lord Tennyson

C) Matthew Arnold

D) Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Answer: A) Gerard Manley Hopkins

Explanation: Hopkins' sonnet (1877) celebrates a kestrel's flight while exploring Christ's sacrifice through "sprung rhythm."

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