ENGLISH HELP 50 POINTS (MUST ANSWER ALL QUESTIONS)
What is the speaker's ritual every night in "Annabel Lee"?
Question 12 options:
He visits Annabel Lee's grave site and leaves flowers.
He prays to God each night to let him be with her.
He lays down next to her in her tomb each night.
Question 13 (2 points)
Why is the speaker so moved by the tide in “I started Early—took my dog?”
Question 13 options:
Nature, in the form of the encroaching tide, reminds the speaker that it is capable, indifferent, and powerful.
Nature, in the form of the splashing waves, inspires and delights the speaker with its playfulness.
Nature, in the form of the incoming tide, amazes the speaker with its beauty and glory as it flows around her.
Question 14 (2 points)
Why does Dickinson’s speaker ask readers to be gentle in their critique in “This is my letter to the World”?
Question 14 options:
For the sake of and love of nature
For the sake of her delicate emotions
For the sake of the reader’s beliefs
Question 15 (1 point)
In “I heard a Fly buzz—when I died” Dickinson uses the following comparison—“The Stillness in the Room / Was like the Stillness in the Air" (164). What type of comparison is this?
Question 15 options:
simile
metaphor
Question 16 (3 points)
In “Because I could not stop for Death,” Dickinson describes death taking her through the stages of life. Match each stage to its symbolic counterpart.
Question 16 options:
childhood
death
adulthood
1.
Children at school, playground
2.
Fields of grain
3.
The setting sun
Question 17 (1 point)
Emily Dickinson’s poetry about death can best be described as sometimes serious and emotional, but sometimes light.
Question 17 options:
True
False