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Literatura Inglesa II - Aula 2

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15/05/2018 EPS
http://estacio.webaula.com.br/Classroom/index.html?id=1946840&classId=897539&topicId=2690148&p0=03c7c0ace395d80182db07ae2c30f034&enableForum=
CEL0561_EX_A2_201607297221_V1
 
 
 LITERATURA INGLESA II 2a aula
 Lupa 
Vídeo
 
PPT
 
MP3
 
 
Exercício: CEL0561_EX_A2_201607297221_V1 25/04/2018 00:53:34 (Finalizada)
Aluno(a): LÍVIA GARCIA DE ARAÚJO 2018.1 EAD
Disciplina: CEL0561 - LITERATURA INGLESA II 201607297221
 
 
Ref.: 201607491761
 1a Questão
How did Wordsworth describe all good poetry?
As the divine gift from God.
As the expression of love relationships.
As the rhythmic expression of Gothic thoughts.
 As the polite expression of a corrupted age.
 As the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings.
 
 
 
Ref.: 201607491752
 2a Questão
Which of the following became the most popular Romantic poetic form, following on Wordsworth's claim that poetic
inspiration is contained within the inner feelings of the individual ?
the political poem.
 the lyric poem written in the first person.
 the ode.
the free ¿style poem.
the sonnet.
 
 
 
Ref.: 201607491747
 3a Questão
Read the following poem: The World Is Too Much With Us, BY WILLIAM WORDSWORTH The world is too much with us;
late and soon, Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers; Little we see in Nature that is ours; We have given our
hearts away, a sordid boon! This Sea that bares her bosom to the moon; The winds that will be howling at all hours, And
are up-gathered now like sleeping flowers; For this, for everything, we are out of tune; It moves us not. Great God! I¿d
rather be A Pagan suckled in a creed outworn; So might I, standing on this pleasant lea, Have glimpses that would make
me less forlorn; Have sight of Proteus rising from the sea; Or hear old Triton blow his wreathed horn. In the poem: ¿The
world is too much with us¿, Wordsworth, in this relatively simple poem,
15/05/2018 EPS
http://estacio.webaula.com.br/Classroom/index.html?id=1946840&classId=897539&topicId=2690148&p0=03c7c0ace395d80182db07ae2c30f034&enableForum=
blames Nature for what has been happening to us.
deals with his boyhood as a pagan child.
states his love for a woman.
 angrily states that human beings are too preoccupied with the material (¿The world...getting and spending¿) and
have lost touch with the spiritual and with nature.
shows his love for God and for singing.
 
 
 
Ref.: 201607901868
 4a Questão
Which of the following ideas is NOT applicable to romantic poetry in England?
Lord Byron is one of the icons in Romantic poetry of England.
 Romantic poetry in England is divided into three generations of poets.
As the poet wanted to be close to nature, life in the countryside was extremely valued for its simplicity and
humble lifestyle.
The First generation of poems is characterised by an emphasis on the self and its relationship with nature.
William Woodsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge lived in the best place in England considering the countryside:
Lake District, in northern England. For this reason they are known as the Lake Poets.
 
 
 
Ref.: 201607491756
 5a Questão
According to Romanticism, the idealizing woman should be¿
 strange and magical.
dutiful young ordinary girls.
rich young ladies, who could run a house very well.
ordinary girls who could play the piano.
seeking for a lasting relationship which, one day, would end in tragedy.
 
 
 
Ref.: 201607492227
 6a Questão
What does Mr. Rochester ask Jane to fetch for Mr. Mason from the drawer in his room?
 A pillow and blanket.
A pipe and matches.
A knife and towel.
A phial and glass.
 
 
 
Ref.: 201607943490
 7a Questão
How was Nature seen by the romantic poets of the first generation?
 As a place where the artists could look for isolation and inspiration.
As the perfect place to protect innocence.
That being close to nature might make a woman fall in love with a man.
As a place where the unhappy people could try to heal their pain.
That it was being destroyed by men.
15/05/2018 EPS
http://estacio.webaula.com.br/Classroom/index.html?id=1946840&classId=897539&topicId=2690148&p0=03c7c0ace395d80182db07ae2c30f034&enableForum=
 
 
 
Ref.: 201607538842
 8a Questão
What is the first generation of romantics characterized by?
The literary forms these poets devise continue rethinking again the possibility of epic, heroism, and how poetic
forms, and figures convey meaning. A strong faith in God was compatible to all first generation of romantics.
An acceptance of the poetic tradition or, more precisely, the Neoclassical insistence on prescribed poetic norms
and the fact that the Reign of Terror after the French Revolution dashed most hopes for democratic new
beginnings and massive labor unrest.
All the poets who belong to the first generation were filled with a yearning for spiritual reality, and for a
redefinition of the animal imagination beyond the Smithsonian precepts of order and control.
For Romantic authors, the expression of being a subject or a person was a task that was separable from the
remarkable and disturbing era that was theirs, an era that included the British and American Revolutions,
political unrest and cultural change in Britain and the global effects of European imperial expansion.
 A shift in style and subject matter from the Neoclassical, who focused on reason, tradition and society. Some
relevant romantic aspects included nature, dreams, feelings and childhood.

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