浙江省2008年7月英美文学选读真题
(2012-03-01 08:34:42)
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英美moby-dick选读浙江省文学杂谈 |
PART ONE(40 POINTS)
I. Multiple Choice (40 points in all,1 for each)
Select from the four choices of each item the
one that best answers the question or completes the statement.
Write your answers on the Answer Sheet.
1. Of all the eighteenth—century British novelists ______ was the first to set out,both in theory and practice,to write specially a “comic epic in prose”,the first to give the modern novel its structure and style.
A. Thomas GrayB. Richard Brinsley Sheridan
C. Jonathan Swift D. Henry
Fielding
2. The poem “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard” established ______ as the leader of the sentimental poetry of the day,especially “the Graveyard School”.
A. Thomas Gray B. Samuel
Johnson
C. John Bunyan D. John
Milton
3. “Do you think, because I am poor,obscure,plain,and little,I am soulless and heartless?... And if God had gifted me with some beauty,and much wealth,I should have made it as hard for you to leave me. as it is now for me to leave you. ”The quoted part is taken from ______.
A. Great ExpectationsB. Wuthering Heights
C. Jane EyreD. Pride and Prejudice
4. The most famous dramatists in the Renaissance England are all the following EXCEPT ______.
A. Francis BaconB. Christopher Marlowe
C. William ShakespeareD. BenJonson
5. George Bernard Shaw’s play Mrs. Warren’s Profession is about______.
A. slum landlordismB. the economic oppression of
women
C. the political corruption in EnglandD. the
religious corruption in England
6. All of the following statements can correctly describe the Enlightenment Movement EXCEPT ______.
A. The movement flourished in France.
B. The movement was a furtherance of the Renaissance.
C. The purpose of the movement was to enlighten the whole world.
D. The purpose of the movement was to enhance the religious education.
7. Among the three major poetical works by John Milton ______ is the most perfect example of the verse drama after the Greek style in English.
A. Samson Agonistes B. Paradise
Lost
C. Paradise Regained D.
Areopagitica
8. The major British Romantic poets Blake,Wordsworth,Coleridge,Byron,Shelley and Keats started a rebellion against the neoclassical literature,which was later regarded as _____.
A. the poetic romanceB. the poetic
movement
C. the poetic revolutionD. the poetic
reformation
9. Jane Austen’s main literary concern is about ______.
A. human beings in their personal relationships
B. the love story between the rich and the poor
C. maturity achieved through the loss of illusions
D. the daily country life of the upper-middle-class English
10. Among the following British Romantic poets ______ is regarded as a “worshipper of nature”.
A. William BlakeB. William Wordsworth
C. George Gordon ByronD. John Keats
11. Jonathan Swift’s greatest satiric work is ______.
A. A Tale of a TubB. The Battle of Books
C. Gulliver’s TravelsD. “A Modest
Proposal’’
12. Among the following writers ______ is considered to be the best— known English dramatist since Shakespeare.
A. Oscar WildeB. John Galsworthy
C. W. B. YeatsD. George Bernard Shaw
13. As a representative of the Enlightenment,______ was one of the first to introduce rationalism to England.
A. Francis BaconB. Alexander Pope
C. Thomas GrayD. T. S. Eliot
14. All of the following poets are regarded as “Lake Poets” EXCEPT ______.
A. Samuel Taylor ColeridgeB. Robert
Southey
C. William WordsworthD. William Blake
15. “To be, or not to be — that is the question;/whether’ tis nobler in the mind to suffer,/the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,/Or to take arms against a sea of troubles, /And by opposing end them?” The quoted lines are taken from ______.
A. King LearB. Romeo and Juliet
C. OthelloD. Hamlet
16. Daniel Defoe describes ______ as a typical English middle — class man of the eighteenth century,the very prototype of the empire builder,the pioneer colonist.
A. Robinson CrusoeB. Moll Flanders
C. GulliverD. Tom Jones
17. The declaration that “I know that This World is a World of IMAGINATION & Vision,” and that “The Nature of my work is visionary or imaginative’’ belongs to ______.
A. William BlakeB. William Wordsworth
C. Samuel Taylor ColeridgeD.George Gordon
Byron
18. Although writing from different points of view and with different techniques,writers in the Victorian Period shared one thing in common,that is,they were all concerned about ______.
A. the fate of the upper class
B. the reformation of the government
C. the fate of the common people
D. the future of their family clans
19. “If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?’’ The quoted line comes from ______.
A. Shelley’s “Ode to the West Wind’’B. Walt
Whitman’s Leaves of Grass
C. John Milton’s Paradise LostD.John Keats’ “Ode
on a Grecian Urn”
20. Among the following figures ______ is Dickens’ first child hero.
A.Little NellB.David Copperfield
C.Oliver TwistD.Little Dorrit
21. In the play The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde,the upper — class people are described all of the following EXCEPT ______.
A. corruptB. snobbish
C. hypocriticalD. ambitious
22. In Thomas Hardy’s Wessex novels, there is an
apparent ______ touch in his description of the simple and
beautiful though primitive rural life.
A. nostalgicB. humorous
C. romanticD.ironic
23. “Life is but a losing battle, it is a struggle man can dominate in such a way that loss becomes dignity;man can be physically destroyed but never defeated spiritually.” This notion is typically held by ______.
A. Mark TwainB. Ezra Pound
C. William FaulknerD. Ernest Hemingway
24. The literary spokesman of the Jazz Age is ______.
A. Henry JamesB. Robert Frost
C. F. Scott FitzgeraldD. William Faulkner
25.North of Boston is described by the author,Robert Frost,as “a book of people,’’ which shows a brilliant insight
into ______ character and the background that formed it.
A. the cowboyB. New England
C. Ivy ColleagueD. ivory tower
26.People generally regarded ______ as the forerunner of the 20th — century “stream- of-consciousness” novels and the founder of psychological realism.
A. Theodore DreiserB. William Faulkner
C. Henry JamesD.Mark Twain
27. According to ______, “There is evil in every human heart,which may remain latent,perhaps,through the whole life;but circumstances may rouse it to activity.”
A. Nathaniel HawthorneB. Edgar Ellen Poe
C. William FaulknerD.Theodore Dreiser
28. Hemingway once described _____ the one book from which “all modern American literature comes.”
A. The Adventures of Huckleberry FinnB. The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer
C. The Gilded AgeD. Innocents Abroad
29. What Walt Whitman prefers for his new subject and new poetic feelings is “______,”that is,poetry without a fixed beat or regular rhyme scheme.
A. fixed verseB. free verse
C. fixed endingD. free ending
30. By writing _______ Melville reached the most flourishing stage of his literary creativity.
A. TypeeB. Omoo
C. MardiD. Moby-Dick
31. Shortly before his death in 1945,______ joined the Communist Party.
A. Theodore DreiserB. Mark Twain
C. Henry JamesD. Ezra Pound
32. Naturalism is evolved from ______ when the author’s tone in writing becomes less serious and less sympathetic but more ironic and more pessimistic.
A. RomanticismB. Modernism
C. RealismD. Scientism
33. One of the most familiar themes in American naturalism is the theme of human ______.
A. peacefulnessB. joyfulness
C. bestialityD. civilization
34. Hawthorne’s view of man and human history originated,to a great extent,from ______.
A. TranscendentalismB. Puritanism
C. HumanismD. Expressionism
35. In general, the American woman poet _____ wanted to live simply as a complete independent being,and so she did,as a spinster.
A. Anne BretB. Emily Dickinson
C. Anna DickinsonD. Emily Shaw
36. Theodore Dreiser’s ______ found expression in almost every book he wrote in which “kill or to be killed” was the law.
A. romanticismB. naturalism
C. cubismD. classicalism
37. William Faulkner creates his own mythical kingdom that mirrors not only the decline of the ______ society but also the spiritual wasteland of the whole American society.
A. southernB. northern
C. westernD. eastern
38. Almost every book written by Hawthorne discusses _____,which reflects his unceasing interest in the “interior of the heart” of man’s being.
A. sin and evilB. 1ove and hatred
C. frustration and self - denialD. balance and
self - discipline
39. A preoccupation with the ______ view of original sin and the mystery of evil marked the works of Hawthorne,Melville and a host of lesser writers.
A. optimisticB. Calvinistic
C. PlatonicD. Socratic
40. The American ______ as a cultural heritage exerted great influences over American moral values in the American Romantic period.
A. PuritanismB.Atheism
C. DeismD. Cynicism
PART TWO(60 POINTS)
II. Reading Comprehension(16 points in all,4 for each)
Read the quoted parts
carefully and answer the questions in English.Write your answers in
the corresponding space on the Answer Sheet.
41. “The fiver glideth at his own sweet will:
Dear God! the very houses seem asleep;
And all that mighty heart is
lying still!”
(from William Wordsworth’s “Composed upon
Westminster Bridge”)
Questions:
A. What figure of speech is used in the quoted lines?
B. What does “that mighty heart’’ refer to?
C. What does the poem decribe?
42. “When the stars threw down their spears,
And water’d heaven with their tears,
Did he smile his work to see?
Did he who made the Lamb make thee?”
Questions:
A. Identify the poet and the poem from which the
quoted lines are taken
B. Whom does the “he’’ refer to?
C. What does the “Lamb” symbolize?
43. “My tongue,every atom of my blood,form’d from this soil,this air,
Born here of parents born here from parents the
same,and their
parents the same,
I,now thirty-seven years old in perfect health
begin,
Hoping to cease not till death”
Questions:
A. Identify the poet and the poem from which the
quoted lines are taken.
B. What do “soil” and “air” represent in the
first line?
C. What does the poet try to say in the above
four lines?
44. “I cannot rub the strangeness from my sight
I got from looking through a pane of glass
I skimmed this morning from the drinking
trough
And held against the world of hoary grass.”
Questions:
A. Identify the poet and the poem from which the
quoted lines are taken.
B. What does the word “strangeness’’ refer
to?
C. What do the quoted lines imply?
III.Questions and Answers(24 points in all,6 for each)
Give a brief answer to each of the following
questions in English.Write your answers in the corresponding space
on the Answer Sheet.
45. As a leading Romanticist,Byron’s chief contribution is his creation of the “Byronic Hero”.Briefly explain the literary term “Byronic Hero’’.
46. TheWaste Land is T.S.Eliot’s most important single poem.Try to state the theme and the significance of the poem briefly.
47.What is the most famous theme in Henry James’s fiction?And what is his favourite approach in characterization,which makes him different from Mark Twain and W·D.Howells as a realist? Give two titles of his first period works in which this theme and this approach are employed.
48. As a leading spokesman of the “Imagist Movement”,what principles does Ezra Pound endorse?
IV. Topic Discussion(20 points in all,10 for each)
Write no less than 150 words on each of the following topics in English in the corresponding space on the Answer Sheet.
49. Discuss Charles Dickens’ art of fiction:the setting,the character — portrayal,the language,etc.,based on his novel Oliver Twist.
50. Greatly and permanently affected by the war experiences, Hemingway formed his own writing style,together with his theme and hero. Please discuss Hemingway’s writing style in relation to his novels you have read.
I. Multiple Choice (40 points in all,1 for each)
1. Of all the eighteenth—century British novelists ______ was the first to set out,both in theory and practice,to write specially a “comic epic in prose”,the first to give the modern novel its structure and style.
A. Thomas Gray
2. The poem “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard” established ______ as the leader of the sentimental poetry of the day,especially “the Graveyard School”.
3. “Do you think, because I am poor,obscure,plain,and little,I am soulless and heartless?... And if God had gifted me with some beauty,and much wealth,I should have made it as hard for you to leave me. as it is now for me to leave you. ”The quoted part is taken from ______.
A. Great Expectations
C. Jane Eyre
4. The most famous dramatists in the Renaissance England are all the following EXCEPT ______.
A. Francis Bacon
C. William Shakespeare
5. George Bernard Shaw’s play Mrs. Warren’s Profession is about______.
A. slum landlordism
C. the political corruption in England
6. All of the following statements can correctly describe the Enlightenment Movement EXCEPT ______.
A. The movement flourished in France.
B. The movement was a furtherance of the Renaissance.
C. The purpose of the movement was to enlighten the whole world.
D. The purpose of the movement was to enhance the religious education.
7. Among the three major poetical works by John Milton ______ is the most perfect example of the verse drama after the Greek style in English.
8. The major British Romantic poets Blake,Wordsworth,Coleridge,Byron,Shelley and Keats started a rebellion against the neoclassical literature,which was later regarded as _____.
A. the poetic romance
C. the poetic revolution
9. Jane Austen’s main literary concern is about ______.
A. human beings in their personal relationships
B. the love story between the rich and the poor
C. maturity achieved through the loss of illusions
D. the daily country life of the upper-middle-class English
10. Among the following British Romantic poets ______ is regarded as a “worshipper of nature”.
A. William Blake
C. George Gordon Byron
11. Jonathan Swift’s greatest satiric work is ______.
A. A Tale of a Tub
C. Gulliver’s Travels
12. Among the following writers ______ is considered to be the best— known English dramatist since Shakespeare.
A. Oscar Wilde
C. W. B. Yeats
13. As a representative of the Enlightenment,______ was one of the first to introduce rationalism to England.
A. Francis Bacon
C. Thomas Gray
14. All of the following poets are regarded as “Lake Poets” EXCEPT ______.
A. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. William Wordsworth
15. “To be, or not to be — that is the question;/whether’ tis nobler in the mind to suffer,/the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,/Or to take arms against a sea of troubles, /And by opposing end them?” The quoted lines are taken from ______.
A. King Lear
C. Othello
16. Daniel Defoe describes ______ as a typical English middle — class man of the eighteenth century,the very prototype of the empire builder,the pioneer colonist.
A. Robinson Crusoe
C. Gulliver
17. The declaration that “I know that This World is a World of IMAGINATION & Vision,” and that “The Nature of my work is visionary or imaginative’’ belongs to ______.
A. William Blake
C. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
18. Although writing from different points of view and with different techniques,writers in the Victorian Period shared one thing in common,that is,they were all concerned about ______.
A. the fate of the upper class
B. the reformation of the government
C. the fate of the common people
D. the future of their family clans
19. “If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?’’ The quoted line comes from ______.
A. Shelley’s “Ode to the West Wind’’
C. John Milton’s Paradise Lost
20. Among the following figures ______ is Dickens’ first child hero.
A.Little Nell
C.Oliver Twist
21. In the play The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde,the upper — class people are described all of the following EXCEPT ______.
A. corrupt
C. hypocritical
22. In Thomas Hardy’s
A. nostalgic
C. romantic
23. “Life is but a losing battle, it is a struggle man can dominate in such a way that loss becomes dignity;man can be physically destroyed but never defeated spiritually.” This notion is typically held by ______.
A. Mark Twain
C. William Faulkner
24. The literary spokesman of the Jazz Age is ______.
A. Henry James
C. F. Scott Fitzgerald
25.North of Boston is described by the author,Robert Frost,as “a book of people,’’
A. the cowboy
C. Ivy Colleague
26.People generally regarded ______ as the forerunner of the 20th — century “stream- of-consciousness” novels and the founder of psychological realism.
A. Theodore Dreiser
C. Henry James
27. According to ______, “There is evil in every human heart,which may remain latent,perhaps,through the whole life;but circumstances may rouse it to activity.”
A. Nathaniel Hawthorne
C. William Faulkner
28. Hemingway once described _____ the one book from which “all modern American literature comes.”
A. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
C. The Gilded Age
29. What Walt Whitman prefers for his new subject and new poetic feelings is “______,”that is,poetry without a fixed beat or regular rhyme scheme.
A. fixed verse
C. fixed ending
30. By writing _______ Melville reached the most flourishing stage of his literary creativity.
A. Typee
C. Mardi
31. Shortly before his death in 1945,______ joined the Communist Party.
A. Theodore Dreiser
C. Henry James
32. Naturalism is evolved from ______ when the author’s tone in writing becomes less serious and less sympathetic but more ironic and more pessimistic.
A. Romanticism
C. Realism
33. One of the most familiar themes in American naturalism is the theme of human ______.
A. peacefulness
C. bestiality
34. Hawthorne’s view of man and human history originated,to a great extent,from ______.
A. Transcendentalism
C. Humanism
35. In general, the American woman poet _____ wanted to live simply as a complete independent being,and so she did,as a spinster.
A. Anne Bret
C. Anna Dickinson
36. Theodore Dreiser’s ______ found expression in almost every book he wrote in which “kill or to be killed” was the law.
A. romanticism
C. cubism
37. William Faulkner creates his own mythical kingdom that mirrors not only the decline of the ______ society but also the spiritual wasteland of the whole American society.
A. southern
C. western
38. Almost every book written by Hawthorne discusses _____,which reflects his unceasing interest in the “interior of the heart” of man’s being.
A. sin and evil
C. frustration and self - denial
39. A preoccupation with the ______ view of original sin and the mystery of evil marked the works of Hawthorne,Melville and a host of lesser writers.
A. optimistic
C. Platonic
40. The American ______ as a cultural heritage exerted great influences over American moral values in the American Romantic period.
A. Puritanism
C. Deism
PART TWO(60 POINTS)
II. Reading Comprehension(16 points in all,4 for each)
41. “The fiver glideth at his own sweet will:
A. What figure of speech is used in the quoted lines?
B. What does “that mighty heart’’ refer to?
C. What does the poem decribe?
42. “When the stars threw down their spears,
43. “My tongue,every atom of my blood,form’d from this soil,this air,
44. “I cannot rub the strangeness from my sight
III.Questions and Answers(24 points in all,6 for each)
45. As a leading Romanticist,Byron’s chief contribution is his creation of the “Byronic Hero”.Briefly explain the literary term “Byronic Hero’’.
46. TheWaste Land is T.S.Eliot’s most important single poem.Try to state the theme and the significance of the poem briefly.
47.What is the most famous theme in Henry James’s fiction?And what is his favourite approach in characterization,which makes him different from Mark Twain and W·D.Howells as a realist? Give two titles of his first period works in which this theme and this approach are employed.
48. As a leading spokesman of the “Imagist Movement”,what principles does Ezra Pound endorse?
IV. Topic Discussion(20 points in all,10 for each)
Write no less than 150 words on each of the following topics in English in the corresponding space on the Answer Sheet.
49. Discuss Charles Dickens’ art of fiction:the setting,the character — portrayal,the language,etc.,based on his novel Oliver Twist.
50. Greatly and permanently affected by the war experiences, Hemingway formed his own writing style,together with his theme and hero. Please discuss Hemingway’s writing style in relation to his novels you have read.
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