Complete the quote: “To be, or not to be…”
“that is the question”
Who is influenced by novels in Northanger Abbey?
Catherine Morland
Which idea links Mariana and Alone?
Isolation
La Belle Dame Sans Merci:
And no birds ......
"sing"
Which text opens with a Preface made up of short, aphoristic statements about art?
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Who says: “Something is rotten in the state of Denmark”?
Marcellus
Who remains physically unchanged while morally corrupt?
Dorian Gray
Which theme links Northanger Abbey and One Need Not Be a Chamber to be Haunted
Fear existing in the mind, Imagination
Superstition
Yield to peace the mourning ...!
"day"
What does Oscar Wilde argue art should not be?
Moral / didactic
(“There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book.”)
What does Hamlet call Denmark?
“A prison”
Who murders the woman he loves?
The speaker in Porphyria’s Lover
Which theme links La Belle Dame Sans Merci and Dorian Gray?
Destructive beauty
Alone
"Of a demon in my ...-"
"view"
Name one flower that has specific symbolic meaning in The Picture of Dorian Gray.
Lily, Rose, Daisy, Poppy, Laburnum...
Complete the quote:
"A thought which, quartered, hath but one part wisdom and ever three parts ....."
"coward"
Who is abandoned and trapped in longing
Mariana
Name 3 "damsels in distress" in the texts you've studied
Sibyl Vane, Mariana, Porphyria, Catherine Morland
Porphyria's Lover
"And yet God has not said a .....!"
"word"
Is it Catherine Morland or John Thorpe that loves the book "The Mysteries of Udolpho"
Catherine Morland
Complete the quote:
"But break, my heart, for I must...."
"hold my tongue"
Who is destroyed by a supernatural femme fatale?
The knight in La Belle Dame Sans Merci
Which ideas connect The Picture of Dorian Gray and Porphyria's Lover
Obsession, Possessiveness over Beauty, Beautiful domestic setting covering ugly moral reality
One Need Not Be A Chamber To Be Haunted
"O’erlooking a superior spectre –
Or .....–"
"more"
In what ways to both Oscar Wilde and Jane Austen "break the 4th wall" in their novels (speak directly to the reader)
Oscar Wilde - in his Preface
Jane Austen - in her "defense of the novel" in Ch 5