front 1 What new title does Macbeth receive early in Act one? | back 1 Thane of Cawdor |
front 2 Lady Macbeth calls on supernatural powers to | back 2 Unsex me here |
front 3 What does lady Macbeth say she would do with her child if she had to? | back 3 Dash its brains out |
front 4 What is going on at Macbeth's Castle while the murders are killing Banquo? | back 4 A feast |
front 5 What does the first apparition tell Macbeth? | back 5 Beware Macduff |
front 6 What does the second apparition tell Macbeth? | back 6 None of women born shall harm Macbeth |
front 7 What does the third apparition tell Macbeth? | back 7 That he will fall when Birnam wood comes to Dunsinane |
front 8 What is the best vision that the witches show Macbeth? | back 8 Procession of eight kings |
front 9 What happens to lady Macduff? | back 9 She is killed |
front 10 What does Lady Macbeth's gentlewomen tell the doctor she see's every night? | back 10 Lady Macbeth sleep walking |
front 11 What motion does Lady Macbeth go through as the doctor and the gentlewomen watch? | back 11 Washing her hands |
front 12 Who becomes the kind of scotland at the end of the play? | back 12 Malcolm |
front 13 "stars hide your fires/let hot light see my black and deep desires." | back 13 -Imagery -Macbeth |
front 14 "This castle hath a pleasant seat; the air/nimbly and sweetly recommends itself..." | back 14 -Irony -Duncan |
front 15 "...why do you dress me/in borrowed robes?" | back 15 -Imagery -Macbeth |
front 16 "will all great Neptune's Ocean wash this blood/clean from my hand? NO, this my hand will rather/the multitudinous seas incarnadine./ making the green one red." | back 16 -Allusion -Macbeth |
front 17 "Here's the smell of the blood still. All the perfumes/of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand..." | back 17 -Imagery -Lady Macbeth |
front 18 "Now does he feel his title/hang loose about him, like a giant's robe/upon a dwarfish theif." | back 18 -Imagery -Macduff |
front 19 "Fair is foul and foul is fair" | back 19 -Paradox -Witches |
front 20 "Come, seeking night/scarf up the tender eye of pitiful day,/and with thy bloody and invisible hand i cancel and tear to pieces that great bond/which keeps me pale." | back 20 -Imagery -Macbeth |
front 21 "Double, double toil and trouble/fire burn and cauldron bubble." | back 21 -Witches |
front 22 "Tis safer to be that which we destroy/than by destruction dwell in doubtful joy." | back 22 -Lady Macbeth |
front 23 "It will have blood, they say; blood will have blood." | back 23 -Macbeth |
front 24 I smeared the faces of Duncan's guards with blood | back 24 Lady Macbeth |
front 25 I killed Duncan | back 25 Macbeth |
front 26 At the beginning of the drama, i am king of Scotland | back 26 Duncan |
front 27 The tragic flaw in my character is ambition | back 27 Macbeth |
front 28 I killed the bloody grooms. | back 28 Macbeth |
front 29 In order to conceal their number's, i ordered my soldiers to bear before them boughs. | back 29 Malcolm |
front 30 I went to England to join forces with Malcolm | back 30 Macduff |
front 31 I convinced the 2 murderers that Banquo was their enemy as well as mine. | back 31 Macbeth |
front 32 My father named me prince of cumberland. | back 32 Malcolm |
front 33 I commit suicide | back 33 Lady Macbeth |
front 34 I killed Macbeth | back 34 Macduff |
front 35 According to Utopia, a king can lose his majesty by | back 35 Treating his subjects badly |
front 36 Which idea does Utopia communicate with the rhetorical question "where will you find more quarreling than among beggars." | back 36 Making people poor destroys peace in a kingdom |
front 37 From Elizabeth's speech, you can draw the conclusion that she believes she owes her life and honor first to | back 37 God |
front 38 Elizabeth goes among her soldiers as they prepare for battle to | back 38 Show her desire to protect her realm |
front 39 In her speech, Elizabeth says she does not appear, "for my recreation". This author of Utopia would agree with this statement because he believes that | back 39 Rulers should avoid pleasures when people suffer |
front 40 In the Prince, the author believes that when rulers ignore reality, what ought to be done, they | back 40 Bring about their own ruin |
front 41 In the Prince, what perspective does the author reveal about people when he describes the qualities and vices found in a prince? | back 41 No one has only good qualities so vice must be accepted. |
front 42 In the Prince, the author argues that fear of punishment controls people better than love. The author is using this statement to support the claim that | back 42 It is safer for a prince to be feared than loved. |
front 43 In the Prince, what does the author say a prince should always avoid doing to his people? | back 43 Taking away their property |
front 44 The scriptural writing in Ecclesiastes follows the rulers of a maxim by | back 44 Describing truths about life |
front 45 What guidance is the maxim in Ecclesiastes most likely trying to give? | back 45 Experiencing both good and bad in life is natural |
front 46 The descriptions of green pastures and still waters in psalm 23 help you make the inference that | back 46 The lord will take care of the speaker |
front 47 The rod and the staff mentioned in Psalm 23 most likely brings comfort to the speaker because they are | back 47 tools a shepherd uses to herd his sheep |
front 48 Ecclesiastes is different from Psalm 23 because | back 48 Psalm 23 describes the Lord |
front 49 Which message can you infer that the Parable of the Prodigal son is communicating when the younger son is hungry enough to eat the swine's food? | back 49 Doing wrong results in pain and misery |
front 50 The father runs to embrace his sinful son at the end of the Parable of the Prodigal Son. This allegorical event stands for the abstract idea of | back 50 Forgiveness |
front 51 The older son in the Parable of the Prodigal Son argues that he deserves a feast by | back 51 Saying he has always obeyed his father |
front 52 What does the father in the Parable of the Prodigal Son say is the proper emotional response when someone who was lost is found? | back 52 Gladness |
front 53 From the feast in the Parable of the Prodigal Son you can make the inference that you should | back 53 Accept sinners who are sorry |
front 54 The message in Eccclesiates and the Parable of the Prodigal Son are similar because each | back 54 Describes changes that people go through during their lifetimes. |
front 55 In "How Soon Hath Time", Milton feels time has stolen his opportunity to | back 55 Achieve much during his youth |
front 56 What truth does Milton's youthful appearance hide in "How Soon Hath Time?" | back 56 He is close to full manhood |
front 57 What stage of life has the speaker reached in "How Soon Hath Time?" | back 57 Young Adulthood |
front 58 Clarify lines 3-4 of "How Soon Hath Time" in modern words. "My hasting days...blossom snow'h" | back 58 I age quickly but do not look old |
front 59 Milton uses figurative language in line 1 of "When I Consider How My Light is Spent" too convey his sad emotions about | back 59 Being blind |
front 60 What does Milton compare to day-labor in the figurative language in line 7 of "When I Consider How my Light is Spent?" | back 60 Using his writing talent |
front 61 What belief does Milton convey in "When I Consider How my Light is Spent" by using figurative language that compares his blindness to a yoke that farm animals wear when they pull loads? | back 61 His new purpose is to bear blindness |
front 62 "When I Consider How my Light is Spent" what do the thousands of angels do and why? | back 62 Rush around the world at God's command |
front 63 What is a way to serve God that Milton can fulfill in "When I Consider How my Light is Spent?" | back 63 Standing still and waiting |
front 64 What aspect of Milton's life do both poems address? | back 64 Talent |
front 65 In Paradise Lost, Reread 25-26. "I may assert...of God to men." The speaker is saying that this poem will | back 65 Explain the workings of God to humans |
front 66 What does the speaker say motivates Satan to go to war with God to conquer Heaven? | back 66 Pride |
front 67 Satan suggests that he and Beelzebub travel to the "dreamy plain" so they can | back 67 Bring all the rebels angels together |
front 68 The speaker argues that God allows Satan to exist in order to | back 68 Show how God will change evil into good |
front 69 What allusion most helps the author describes the fiery conditions in hell? | back 69 Mount Etna |
front 70 Which excerpt shows Satan's arrogance and confidence in himself? | back 70 "A mind not to be changed by place or time" |
front 71 Satan claims the one benefit of being in Hell is to be sure of | back 71 Ruling instead of serving |
front 72 In Pilgrim's Progress, who are the creators of the first Vanity Fair | back 72 Beelzebub and other demons |
front 73 The author emphasizes that the town of Vanity is an allegory that stands for the real world by naming its streets after | back 73 Nationalities |
front 74 The author's purpose in describing the blessed one's leaving the fair without buying anything is most likely to | back 74 Give an example of how to avoid temptation |
front 75 What moral message does Bunyan convey when a chariot takes the allegorical character Faithful to the celestial city? | back 75 Faithful people are rewarded and valued in the celestial city |
front 76 According to Of Studies, where do studies serve as an ornament | back 76 Conversation |
front 77 What does the author call those men who use their studies | back 77 Wise |
front 78 In his essay Of Studies, Bacon uses the aphorism about how to read books to explain the | back 78 Way to approach books of differing importance |
front 79 In the aphorism about the ways to read books in the essay Of Studies, the author caopares reading to | back 79 Eating food |
front 80 You can tell that Bacon believes that reading is an important part of self development when he directs you to | back 80 read to weight and consider |
front 81 Why might people today disagree with Bacons opinion in Of Studies that reading make the a full man?" | back 81 People today have many sources of information other than books |
front 82 Bacon says in Of Studies that mathematic can help someone whose mind wanders because | back 82 Solving mathematic problems requires a focused mind |
front 83 Of Marriage and Single Life, which type of people should have the greatest interest in the future? | back 83 People with children |
front 84 Shows the selfishness of single men when he explains that | back 84 Most are fugitives |
front 85 What skill does marriage teach a man, according to Of Marriage and Single Life? | back 85 Tenderness |
front 86 Of Studies and Of Marriage and Single Life are similar because each | back 86 Emphasizes the importance of education |
front 87 Bacon's aphorism charity in Of Marriage and Single Life | back 87 Give away money rather than supporting a family |
front 88 Of Studies and Of Marriage and Single Life are similar because each focuses on | back 88 How a man may understand himself |
front 89 The Rape of the Lock, The beginning of Canto 3 describes Hampton as the scene of | back 89 Nasty gossip |
front 90 According to the narrator, what is Hampton Court? | back 90 A social gathering place for high society |
front 91 The rhyme in the heroic couplet in lines 13-14("one speaks the...Indian Screen") is humorous because it | back 91 Makes the queen as important as a screen |
front 92 "Belinda now, whom thirst...with conquests yet to com..." These lines explain that Belinda longs to | back 92 Beat two men at cards |
front 93 Reread the elevated language in lines 59-60 " for lo!...and the mill turns round" What does the description of the items help you visualize? | back 93 The table set with cups and spoons |
front 94 Belinda shouts in lines 53-54 because she is | back 94 Excited that she has won the card game |
front 95 What other than desire causes the Baron to cut the lock? | back 95 Coffee vapors |
front 96 Why does Ariel retire? | back 96 He sees the Belinda loves a human |
front 97 Supernatural beings interfere in human activities in the mock epic when | back 97 Sprites blow back Belinda's hair |
front 98 Reread lines 101-102, the peer now...;to divide." which statement best paraphrases the elevated language? | back 98 The Baron opens and closes scissors on the hair |
front 99 Which phrase best describes Belinda's reaction to the Baron's action? | back 99 Vengeful fury |
front 100 The poem uses exaggeration for comic effect when Belinda threatens the Baron with | back 100 A hairpin |
front 101 What does the speaker compare the lock of hair to in line 185-188? | back 101 A sudden star |
front 102 How can you tell that the Baron has romantic feelings for Belinda? | back 102 He hopes to burn olive in cupid's flame |
front 103 A modest proposal, what does the author say is the occupation most Irish mothers? | back 103 Begging |
front 104 One way that the author supports his proposition is by noting that using poor Irish children in this manner will result in an increase in | back 104 Married couplets |
front 105 The author tries to persuade the rich to accept his idea by describing the | back 105 Money the landlords will make |
front 106 Why does Swift refuse to consider young boys as a replacement for version? | back 106 Their meat is too tough |
front 107 How does Swift explain that his plan will help landlords? | back 107 Tenants will now have something valuable |
front 108 Swift's refusal to listen to other, rational ideas shows that | back 108 Other ideas have been ignored and the problem is now of vital importance |
front 109 Candide, you can tell that Candide likes Miss Cunegune because he | back 109 Falters when talking to her |
front 110 Why does Candida consider Pangloss the greatest philosopher in the whole world? | back 110 The province is Candide's world and pangloss is the greatest philosopher of the province |
front 111 Which conclusion can you draw about the Baron based on his treatment of Candide? | back 111 He is authoritarian and can be cruel |
front 112 The men in blue ask Candide to join them for a drink to | back 112 Trick him into becoming a soldier |
front 113 The first indication of the soldier's plan for Candide is their | back 113 Question about his size |
front 114 You can draw the conclusion that Candide is innocent of the world when he | back 114 Accepts money and drinks from soldiers |
front 115 What does his Bulgarian Majesty do when he meets Candide | back 115 He rescues Candide from his fate |
front 116 Voltaire exaggerates the military's use of force when | back 116 The regiment of two thousand men line up to form the gauntlet |