Sredni Vashtar
Letter Home
The Glass Menagerie
Extra Questions
Literary Devices Used
100

In the third sentence of the final paragraph, the "disused tool-shed" functions primarily as a setting in which Conradin

What is discovers meaningful solitude 

100

Lines 27-28 (Their... to me") emphasize the speaker's sense that her

What is past life and true identity are always present

100

According to Tom, the presence of the "gentleman caller" mentioned in the fifth paragraph reinforces a conflict between

What is waiting and fulfillment

100

In "Letter Home," which of the following does the speaker imply about her "plain English and good writing" (Line 6) 

What is that she had mistakenly believed that these skills would be sufficient to get her job

100

“Good-bye is the waving map of your palm, is a stone on my tongue.”
What literary device is being used?


What is metaphor

200

Which of the following effects does the "large polecat-ferret" mentioned toward the end of the final paragraph have on the development of Conradin's character? 

What is it fulfills is Conradin's imaginative ideal because he is able transform it into "a god and a religion" (paragraph 3) 

200

Overall, the poem can best be interpreted as a 

What is a social commentary using a historical period 

200

Which details from the passage would best support a reader's interpretation that escape is a central theme of the passage

What is Tom's description of the gentleman caller and his reference to the postcard from Mazatlan

200

In the "The Glass Menagerie" the specific references to time ("the thirties") and place ("Spain," "Chicago, Cleveland, Saint Louis") primarly serves to 

What is reinforce notion that the play is part of a "world of reality" (paragraph 5) that will be reconstructed from "memory" (paragraph 5) that will be reconstructed from "memory" (paragraph 4) 

200

In "Sredni Vashtar," Conradin’s tool-shed is called “a playroom and a cathedral.” What device does this show?

What is metaphor

300

In the third of the first paragraph, the narrator's description of Mrs. De Ropp as "those three-fifths of the world that are necessary are disagreeable and real" suggests that

What is Mrs. De Ropp is a strict person who fails to appreciate Conradin's creative spirit

300

In kines 21-40 ("There... home"), the speaker's juxtaposition of her life in New Orleans with her life at "home" primarily serves to emphasize

What is a harsh reality of her situation. 

300

In the fifth paragraph, Tom's description of the "gentleman caller" has which effect? 

What is it prompts Tom to admit that he is prone to attaching figurative meaning to characters

300

In "Srendi Vashtar" toward the end of the final paragraph, Conradin's "exchange" of "a long-secreted hoard of small silver"  with the butcher-boy significant because it

What is develops the idea that Conradin finds joy in acts that would be displeasing to Mrs. De Ropp

300

Tom calls the gentleman caller a symbol for “the long-delayed but always expected something that we live for.” What device is he using?


 

What is symbolism

400

Which lines from the passage would best support a reader's claim that one of the central themes of the passage is independence? 

"Such few pleasures as he could contrive for himself gained an added relish from the likelihood that they would be displeasing to his guardian, and from the realm of his imagination she was locked out-an unclean thing, which should have find no entrance" (paragraph 2) 

400

What is a source of the internal conflict acknowledged by the speaker?

What is she realizes that her race and gender will make it difficult for her to achieve her goals

400

In the first paragraph, Tom's claim that he is "the opposite of a stage magician" and that he tells the "truth in the pleasant disguise of illusion" suggests that he 

What is will the "truth" in a way that his audience can accept

400

This object, hidden in the tool-shed and acquired through an “exchange” with a butcher-boy, becomes both a secret source of imaginative power and a symbol of defiance for Conradin, even though it terrifies him.

What is the polecat-ferret

400

The setting of "The Glass Menagerie" is described as “dimly lighted” and “sentimental,” matching the way memories feel. What device is this?

What is imagery 

500

The second paragraph ("Mrs. De Ropp... entrance") suggests that Conradin is able to cope with his situation primarily by

What is retreating to the security of an interior world
500

Lines 29-34 ("I thought... ends") suggest that the speaker inmitated Miss J-primarily because she

What is regarded speech like Miss J-'s as a means of self improvment

500

In the sixth paragraph, the description of Tom's father, the "fifth character in the play," introduces what idea? 

What is the void created by the father's absence serves as an important character itself. 
500

According to Tom, this character is used as a symbol of “the long-delayed but always expected something that we live for,” and his presence in the play reinforces the conflict between waiting and fulfillment.

Who is the gentleman caller

500

When Tom from "The Glass Menagerie" says, “I give you truth in the pleasant disguise of illusion,” what literary device is this?

What is paradox

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