Songs of Ourselves
Julius Caesar
The Great Gatsby
Carol Ann Duffy
General Knowledge
100
Name five poems and five poets from the collection.
‘The Voice’ by Thomas Hardy, ‘Time’ by Allen Curnow, 'Dover Beach’ by Matthew Arnold, ‘Amends’ by Adrienne Rich, ‘Full Moon and Little Frieda’ by Ted Hughes, ‘Lament’ by Gillian Clarke, ‘On the Grasshopper and The Cricket’ by John Keats, ‘The Flower-Fed Buffaloes’ by Vachel Lindsay, ‘Report to Wordsworh’ by Boey Kim Cheng, ‘First Love’ by John Clare, ‘Marrysong’ by Dennis Scott, ‘So We’ll Go No More A-Roving’ by Lord Byron, ‘Sonnet 43’ by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, ‘Sonnet 29’ by Edna St Vincent Millay
100
Name five characters from Julius Caesar.
Julius Caesar, Calpurnia, Antony, Brutus, Portia, Cassius, The soothsayer, Casca, Lepidus, Octavius
100
Name five characters from 'The Great Gatsby'.
Nick Carraway, Jay Gatsby, Daisy Buchanan, Tom Buchanan, Jordan, Owl Eyes, Meyer Wolfsheim, Myrtle Wilson, George Wilson
100
Name five poems from the collection.
‘Head of English’, ‘The Dolphins’, ‘Stealing’, ‘Foreign’, ‘Miles Away’, ‘Originally’, ‘In Mrs Tilscher’s Class’, ‘Who Loves You’, ‘Nostalgia’, ‘The Good Teachers’, ‘Moments of Grace’, ‘Valentine’, ‘Mean Time’, ‘Prayer’
100
Name three examples of figurative language.
Simile, Metaphor, Personification
200
Name the three sonnets in the collection
'The Cockroach', 'Sonnet: Composed Upon Westminster Bridge' and 'Pied Beauty'. (Note: 'Pied Beauty' is a curtailed sonnet.)
200
What does the soothsayer say to Caesar?
'Beware the Ides of March'.
200
In what year is 'The Great Gatsby' set?
1922
200
Which poem ends with the following line: “The most unusual thing I ever stole?”; “You don’t understand a word I’m saying, do you?”
Stealing
200
Which character in Roald Dahl's 'Charlie and the Chocolate Factory' was turned into a blueberry?
Violet
300
What is the last line of the poem 'Summer Farm'?
'Farm within farm, and in the centre, me.'
300
What finally convinces Brutus to join the conspirators?
The forged letters planted by Cassius.
300
When Gatsby renews his acquaintance with Daisy at Nick's house, what does he knock off the mantle piece?
A clock
300
What is the last line of 'Dolphins'?
'There is a man and our mind knows we will die here.'
300
Who is the wizard in 'The Hobbit'?
Gandalf
400
Give one example of personification used in 'The Planners'.
'Even the sea draws back/and the skies surrender.'
400
What does Artemidorus offer Caesar in the marketplace?
A letter warning him about the conspiracy.
400
Who hired the young Gatsby as an assistant?
Dan Cody
400
What is the first line of 'Foreign'?
'Imagine living in a strange, dark city for twenty years.'
400
The Bennett family appear in which Jane Austen novel?
Pride and Prejudice
500
What is rhyme scheme in 'Pied Beauty'?
abcabc dbcd c (A sestet, a quatrain and a half line)
500
How many scenes are in 'Julius Caesar'?
16
500
Explain the following quotation: The truth was that Jay Gatsby, of West Egg, Long Island, sprang from his Platonic conception of himself. He was a son of God—a phrase which, if it means anything, means just that—and he must be about His Father’s business, the service of a vast, vulgar, and meretricious beauty. So he invented just the sort of Jay Gatsby that a seventeen year old boy would be likely to invent, and to this conception he was faithful to the end.
In Chapter 6, when Nick finally describes Gatsby’s early history, he uses this striking comparison between Gatsby and Jesus Christ to illuminate Gatsby’s creation of his own identity. Fitzgerald was probably influenced in drawing this parallel by a nineteenth-century book by Ernest Renan entitled The Life of Jesus. This book presents Jesus as a figure who essentially decided to make himself the son of God, then brought himself to ruin by refusing to recognize the reality that denied his self-conception. Renan describes a Jesus who is “faithful to his self-created dream but scornful of the factual truth that finally crushes him and his dream”—a very appropriate description of Gatsby. Fitzgerald is known to have admired Renan’s work and seems to have drawn upon it in devising this metaphor. Though the parallel between Gatsby and Jesus is not an important motif in The Great Gatsby, it is nonetheless a suggestive comparison, as Gatsby transforms himself into the ideal that he envisioned for himself (a “Platonic conception of himself”) as a youngster and remains committed to that ideal, despite the obstacles that society presents to the fulfillment of his dream.
500
Explain this quotation: It seems we live in those staggering years only to haunt them; the vanishing scents and colours of infinite hours like a melting balloon in earlier hands.
The word 'staggering' suggests that our teenage years are both exciting and surprising, but also unsettling. Nonetheless as adults, we recall them as some of the most exciting days of our lives and have a desire to relive them. The simile 'like a melting balloon' clearly shows that our time as teenagers is limited.
500
In which famous novel does Edward Fairfax Rochester play a significant role?
'Jane Eyre'.
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