The title character that must avenge his father's death.
Who is Hamlet?
A man of great talent.
Who is Kurtz?
Comparing two unlikely things to each other.
What is a metaphor?
A time period known for its etiquette and fabulous dances.
18. In lines 5-12 ("When...then"), the speaker describes changes that may take place in his appearance primarily in order to...
(a) dramatize the hardships he is about to face
This Act 5 character, or a piece of him, reveals the theme of the inevitability of death.
What is Yorick's Skull?
Heart of Darkness is commonly read as a critique of this movement in Europe.
A moment in a story that has major consequences and repercussions, colloquially known as a "canon event."
What is a climax?
The name of this house has been in their family for generations.
What is Pemberly?
C) Beloved will in the future need a reminder of what the speaker once was
Who is Ophelia?
It's all about the setting.
What is the Congo?
A character that can't be define as being totally good nor totally bad.
What is morally ambiguous?
This character proposed at the wrong timed...ardently.
Who is Darcy?
20. In context, lines 1-2 ("Here...dwell") serve to indicate which of the following about the speaker?
C) He suggests that he will relain unshaken to his beloved
This character ironically said the statement, "Brevity is the soul of wit."
Who is Polonius?
It's what good authors give.
What is a shift?
Polite, gentle, obtuse, and obsessed with manners.
Who is Mr. Collins?
21. The speaker's comparison of his own youthful looks to "milk" (line 8) primarily serves to suggest
A) an evolution in the beloved's perspective as her love for him matures
Rosencrantz and Guidlenstern
At the beginning of the novel, Marlow is compared to this Eastern Religious figure.
Who is the Buddha?
A story that is told through the "outer" and "inner". Or, Heart of Darkness begins at its ending.
What is a frame novel?
A novel that is told primary through the use of letters.
What is an epistolary novel?
22. In lines 11-20, the speaker imagines a future moment of conflict between the beloved and the "rival fools" that serves to
D) assert that the beloved will remain true to him