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英美文学选读2011年7月真题试题及答案解析(00604)

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  1. Summarize Ernest Hemingway’s artistic features.

  2. Discuss Charles Dickens’ art of fiction: the setting, the character- portrayal, the language, etc. , based on his novel Oliver Twist.

  3. In American literature, Emily Dickinson’s poetry is unique and unconventional in its own way. What are the features of Dickinson’s poems?

  4. What’s the theme of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby?

  5. The Waste Land is T. S. Eliot’s most important single poem. What’s the theme of the poem?

  6. What’s the theme of the poem Paradise Lost? What’s the author’s intention to create it and the implication that the poem expresses?

  7. “ I celebrate myself, and sing myself,

    And what I assume you shall assume,

    For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.

    I loafe and invite my soul,

    I lean and loafe at my ease observing a spear of summer grass. ”

    ( From Walt Whitman’s Song of Myself)

    Questions:

    A.Who does “myself ” refer to?

    B.How do you understand the line “I loafe and invite my soul” ?

    C.What does “a spear of summer grass” symbolize?

  8. “Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow’st;

    Nor shall Death brag thou wander’st in his shade,

    When in eternal lines to time thou grow’st:

    So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see,

    So long lives this, and this gives life to thee. ”

    Questions:

    A.Who’s the poet of the quoted stanza, and what’s the title of the poem?

    B.What does the word “this” in the last line refer to?

    C.What idea do the quoted lines express?

  9. “Never did sun more beautifully steep

    In his first splendor, valley, rock or hill;

    Ne’er saw I, never felt, a calm so deep !

    The river glideth at his own sweet will:

    Dear God! The very houses seem asleep;

    And all that mighty heart is lying still!”

    ( From Wordsworth’s sonnet Composed upon Westminster Bridge)

    Questions:

    A.What does this sonnet describe?

    B.What does the phrase “mighty heart” refer to?

    C.The sonnet follows strictly the Italian form.What is the feature of the Italian form of sonnet?

  10. “ The woods are lovely, dark and deep,

    But I have promises to keep,

    And miles to go before I sleep,

    And miles to go before I sleep. ”

    Questions:

    A.Who’s the poet of the quoted stanza, and what’s the title of the poem?

    B.What does the word “sleep” mean?

    C.What idea do the four lines express?

  11. The House of the Seven Gables was based on the tradition of a curse pronounced on ____________’s family when his great - grandfather was a judge in the Salem witchcraft trials.

    • A.Nathaniel Hawthorne
    • B.Washington Irving
    • C.Ezra Pound
    • D.Walt Whitman
  12. William Faulkner set most of his works in the American ____________ , with his emphasis on the ________subjects and consciousness.

    • A.North... Northern
    • B.East... Eastern
    • C.West... Western
    • D.South... Southern
  13. In 1837, Nathaniel Hawthorne published Twice - Told Tales, a collection of ____________ which attracted critical attention.

    • A.poems
    • B.short stories
    • C.essays
    • D.plays
  14. In 1920, F·Scott Fitzgerald’s first novel ____________ was published, which was, to some extent, his own story.

    • A.This Side of Paradise
    • B.Tales of the Jazz Age
    • C.All the Sad Young Men
    • D.Taps at Reveille
  15. The Financier, The Titan and The Stoic by Theodore Dreiser are called his “Trilogy of _________. ”

    • A.Hatred
    • B.Death
    • C.Desire
    • D.Fate
  16. North of Boston is described by Robert Frost as “a book of people,” which shows a brilliant insight into ____________ character and the background that formed it.

    • A.Eastern
    • B.Western
    • C.Southern
    • D.New England
  17. Henry James’ fame generally rests upon his novels and stories with the____________ theme.

    • A.international
    • B.local
    • C.colonial
    • D.post-modern
  18. Walt Whitman is radically innovative in terms of the form of his poetry. What he prefers for his new poetic feelings is “ ____________ ”.

    • A.standardized rhyming
    • B.regular rhyming
    • C.free verse
    • D.strict verse
  19. More than five hundred poems ____________ wrote are about nature, in which his (her) general skepticism about the relationship between man and nature is well -expressed.

    • A.Robert Frost
    • B.Emily Dickinson
    • C.Ezra Pound
    • D.Walt Whitman
  20. In 1954, the Nobel Prize for literature was granted to ____________ , one of the greatest of American writers.

    • A.Ernest Hemingway
    • B.Robert Frost
    • C.Henry James
    • D.Theodore Dreiser
  21. “Though life is but a losing battle, it is a struggle man can dominate in such a way that loss becomes dignity. ” This is an outlook towards life that ____________ had been trying to illustrate in his works.

    • A.F·Scott Fitzgerald
    • B.Ernest Hemingway
    • C.Theodore Dreiser
    • D.William Faulkner
  22. Herman Melville went to the South Seas on a whaling ship in 1841, where he gained the first -hand information about whaling that he used later in____________.

    • A.Typee
    • B.Redburn
    • C.Moby - Dick
    • D.Omoo
  23. According to ____________ , the life - death cycle, the spring and winter of the earth, the birth and death of the animals is reality.

    • A.Theodore Dreiser
    • B.William Faulkner
    • C.Henry James
    • D.F·Scott Fitzgerald
  24. In his final years, Herman Melville turned again to prose fiction and wrote what is probably his second famous work, ____________ , which was published after his death.

    • A.Billy Budd
    • B.Redburn
    • C.Moby - Dick
    • D.Typee
  25. The Sun Also Rise casts light on a whole generation after ____________ and the effects of the war by way of a vivid portrait of “the Lost Generation. ”

    • A.the Spanish Civil War
    • B.the American- Mexican War
    • C.WWI
    • D.WWII
  26. William Faulkner creates his own mythical kingdom that mirrors not only the decline of the ____________ society of America but also the spiritual wasteland of the whole American society.

    • A.Eastern
    • B.Western
    • C.Southern
    • D.Northern
  27. As a poet with a strong sense of mission, Walt Whitman devoted all his life to the creation of the “single” poem,____________.

    • A.Drum Taps
    • B.North of Boston
    • C.A Boy’s Will
    • D.Leaves of Grass
  28. The best representatives of the English humanists are Thomas More, Christopher Mar-lowe and____________.

    • A.William Shakespeare
    • B.John Milton
    • C.Henry Fielding
    • D.Jonathan Swift
  29. Mark Twain’s particular concern about the local character of a region came about as “local colorism,” a unique variation of American literary____________.

    • A.romanticism
    • B.nationalism
    • C.modernism
    • D.realism
  30. John Milton’s ____________ is probably his most memorable prose work, which is a great plea for freedom of the press.

    • A.Paradise Lost
    • B.Paradise regained
    • C.Areopagitica
    • D.Lycidas
  31. D.H. Lawrence’s novels ____________ are generally regarded as his masterpieces.

    • A.The Rainbow; Women in Love
    • B.The Rainbow; Sons and Lovers
    • C.Sons and Lovers; Lady Chatterley’s Lover
    • D.Women in Love; Lady Chatterley’s Lover
  32. Shakespeare’s authentic non-dramatic poetry consists of two long narrative poems: Venus and Adonis and____________.

    • A.Julius Caesar
    • B.The Winter’s Tale
    • C.The Rape of Lucrece
    • D.The Two gentlemen of Verona
  33. Daniel Defoe describes ____________ as a typical English middle -class man of the eigh- teenth century, the very prototype of the empire builder, the pioneer colonist.

    • A.Robinson Crusoe
    • B.Moll Flanders
    • C.Gulliver
    • D.Tom Jones
  34. In Thomas Hardy’s Wessex novels, there is an apparent ____________ touch in his de- scription of the simple and beautiful though primitive rural life.

    • A.nostalgic
    • B.tragic
    • C.romantic
    • D.ironic
  35. Of all the eighteenth - century novelists ____________ was the first to set out, both in the-ory and practice, to write specially a “comic epic in prose”, the first to give the modern novel its structure and style.

    • A.Thomas Gray
    • B.Richard Brinsley Sheridan
    • C.Jonathan Swift
    • D.Henry Fielding
  36. Among the following writers ____________ is considered to be the best -known English dramatist since Shakespeare.

    • A.Oscar Wilde
    • B.John Galsworthy
    • C.W.B.Yeats
    • D.George Bernard Shaw
  37. William Blake’s ____________ composed during the climax of the French Revolution plays the double role both as a satire and a revolutionary prophecy.

    • A.The Book of Urizen
    • B.The Book of Los
    • C.Poetical Sketches
    • D.Marriage of Heaven and Hell
  38. Charles Dickens’ works are characterized by a mingling of ____________ and pathos.

    • A.metaphor
    • B.passion
    • C.satire
    • D.humor
  39. According to the subjects, William Wordsworth’s short poems can be classified into two groups, poems about____________.

    • A.nature and human life
    • B.happiness and childhood
    • C.symbolism and imagination
    • D.nature and commonlife
  40. T. S. Eliot’s most important single poem ____________ has been hailed as a landmark and a model of the 20th-century English poetry.

    • A.The Hollow Men
    • B.The Waste Land
    • C.Murder in the Cathedral
    • D.Ash Wednesday
  41. The most perfect example of the verse drama after Greek style in English is John Milton’s ____________.

    • A.Paradise Lost
    • B.Paradise Regained
    • C.Samson Agonistes
    • D.Areopagitica
  42. The major theme of Jane Austen’s novels is____________.

    • A.love and money
    • B.money and social status
    • C.social status and marriage
    • D.love and marriage
  43. Among the Romantic poets ____________ is regarded as a “worshipper of nature”.

    • A.William Blake
    • B.William Wordsworth
    • C.George Gordon Byron
    • D.John Keats
  44. Shelley’s greatest achievement is his four - act poetic drama ____________ , which is an ex- ultant work in praise of humankind’s potential.

    • A.Adonais
    • B.Queen Mab
    • C.Prometheus Unbound
    • D.Kubla Khan
  45. Charlotte Brontё’s ____________ is noted for its sharp criticism of the existing society, e. g. the religious hypocrisy of charity institutions.

    • A.The Professor
    • B.Wuthering Heights
    • C.Villette
    • D.Jane Eyre
  46. T. S. Eliot’s poem ____________ is heavily indebted to James Joyce in terms of the stream- of -consciousness technique, also a prelude to The Waste Land.

    • A.“Prufrock”
    • B.“Gerontion”
    • C.The Hollow Men
    • D.Lyrical Ballads
  47. It was only after the publication of ____________ that D.H. Lawrence was recognized as a prominent novelist.

    • A.The Trespasser
    • B.The White Peacock
    • C.Sons and Lovers
    • D.The Rainbow
  48. George Bernard Shaw’s play ____________ shows his almost nihilistic bitterness on the subjects of the cruelty and madness of World War I and the aimlessness and disillusion of the young.

    • A.Getting Married
    • B.Too True to Be Good
    • C.Widowers’ Houses
    • D.The Apple Cart
  49. From ____________ on, the tragic sense becomes the keynote of Thomas Hardy’s novels, the conflict between the traditional and the moden is brought to the center of the stage.

    • A.The Return of the Native
    • B.The Mayor of Casterbridge
    • C.Tess of the D’Urbervilles
    • D.Jude the Obscure
  50. All of Charles Dickens’ works, with the exception of _________, present a criticism of the more complicated and yet most fundamental social institutions and morals of the Victorian England.

    • A.Bleak House
    • B.Hard Times
    • C.Great Expectations
    • D.A Tale of Two Cities