NET PAPER-2 DECEMBER 2013
1. ____ the very word is like a bell
To toll me back from thee to my sole self!
Which word?
(A) Bird
(B) Immortal
(C) Forlorn
(D) Fancy
Answer: (C)
2. In poems like “The Altar” and “Easter
Wings” ________ exploits _______.
(A) John Donne, alliteration
(B) Robert Herrick, trimetre
(C) G.M. Hopkins, sprung rhythm
(D) George Herbert, typographic space
Answer: (D)
3. No, no thou hast not felt the lapse of
hours!
For what wears out the life of mortal men?
‘Tis that repeated shocks, again, again,
Exhaust the energy of strongest souls
And numb the elastic powers …
Who does the poet address here?
(A) The Scholar Gipsy
(B) Telemachus
(C) The Nightingale
(D) The Poet’s Sister, Dorothy
Answer: (A)
4. The roman a clef (French for “novel with
a key”) uses contemporary historical figures as its chief characters. They are
of course given fictional names. One example is Aldous Huxley’s Point Counter
Point. Its Mark Rampion is modelled on M_______.
(A) D.H. Lawrence
(B) E.M. Forster
(C) Wyndham Lewis
(D) Arnold Bennett
Answer: (A)
5. She was a worthy woman al hir lyve, Housbondes
at chirche-dore she hadde fyve,
In the ‘Prologue’ Chaucer represents the
Wife of Bath as:
I. crude and vulgar
II. outspoken and boastfully licentious
III. a witness to masculine oppression
IV. bubbling with vitality
Find the correct combination according to
the code:
(A) I, II and III are correct.
(B) I, II and IV are correct.
(C) I, III and IV are correct.
(D) II, III and IV are correct.
Answer: (B)
6. The novel tells the story of twin
brothers, Waldo, the man of reason and intellect, and Arthur, the innocent
half-wit, the way their lives are inextricably intertwined. Which is the novel?
(A) The Tree of Man
(B) Voss
(C) The Solid Mandala
(D) The Vivisector
Answer: (C)
7. Who among the following was NOT a member
of the Scriblerus Club?
(A) Thomas Parnell
(B) Alexander Pope
(C) Joseph Addison
(D) John Gay
Answer: (C)
8. _______ is a theological term brought
into literary criticism by _______.
(A) Entelechy, St. Augustine
(B) Ambiguity, William Empson
(C) Adequation, Fr Walter Ong
(D) Epiphany, James Joyce
Answer: (D)
9. ________ the Almighty Power Hurled
headlong flaming from th’ Ethereal Sky,
With hideous ruin and combustion down
To bottomless perdition, there to dwell
In Adamantine Chains and penal Fire Who
durst defy th’ Omnipotent to Arms.
(Paradise Lost, I.44-49.)
Choose the appropriate word:
(A) Him
(B) He
(C) Satan
(D) The Fiend
Answer: (A)
10. Which of the following works does not
have a mad woman as a character in it?
(A) The Yellow Wallpaper
(B) The Mad Woman in the Attic
(C) Jane Eyre
(D) Wide Sargasso Sea
Answer: (B)
11. Which of the following is NOT a quest
narrative?
(A) Shelley’s Alastor
(B) Byron’s Manfred
(C) Coleridge’s Christabel
(D) Keats’s Endymion
Answer: (C)
12. The novel has a scene where African
American students are made to compete and fight with each other as they rush
for the gold coins tossed on an electric blanket. Identify the novel.
(A) Richard Wright: Native Son
(B) James Baldwin: Another Country
(C) Ralph Ellison: Invisible Man
(D) Toni Morrison: Bluest Eye
Answer: (C)
13. G.M. Hopkins’s “Windhover” is
dedicated:
(A) To Christ, our Lord
(B) To Christ our lord
(C) To no one
(D) To Christ, the Lord
Answer: (A and B)
14. Match List – I with List – II according
to the code given below:
List – I (Authors)
i. Ted Hughes
ii. Seamus Heaney
iii. W.H. Auden
iv. D.H. Lawrence
List – II (Poems)
1. “The Otter”
2. “Snake”
3. “Ghost Crabs”
4. “Prevent the Dog from Barking with a
Juicy Bone.”
Codes:
i ii iii iv
(A) 1 2 4 3
(B) 2 3 1 4
(C) 3 1 4 2
(D) 3 2 1 4
Answer: (C)
15. His cooks with long disuse their trade
forgot;
Cool was his kitchen, though his brains
were hot.
Who is this character whose stinginess
passed into a proverb?
(A) Corah
(B) Shimei
(C) Zimri
(D) Achitophel
Answer: (B)
16. “The story and the novel, the idea and
the form, are the needle and thread, and I never
heard of a guild of tailors who recommended
the use of the thread without the needle, or
the needle without the thread.”
This famous passage describing the relation
of idea to form is found in
(A) Sir Philip Sidney, An Apology for
Poetry
(B) Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Biographia
Literaria
(C) Henry James, “The Art of Fiction”
(D) I.A. Richards, Principles of Literary
Criticism
Answer: (C)
17. Identify the correctly matched set
below:
(A) The Norman Conquest – 1066
William Caxton and the introduction of
printing – 1575
The King James Bible – 1611
Dr. Johnson’s English Dictionary – 1755
The Commonwealth Period/ the Protectorate –
1649-1660
(B) The Norman Conquest – 1066
William Caxton and the introduction of
printing – 1475
The King James Bible – 1611
Dr. Johnson’s English Dictionary – 1755
The Commonwealth Period/ the Protectorate –
1649-1660
(C) The Norman Conquest – 1016
William Caxton and the introduction of
printing- 1475
The King James Bible – 1564
Dr. Johnson’s English Dictionary -1780
The Commonwealth Period/ the Protectorate –
1649-1660
(D) The Norman Conquest – 1013
William Caxton and the introduction of
printing – 1575
The King James Bible – 1627
Dr. Johnson’s English Dictionary – 1746
The Commonwealth Period/ the Protectorate –
1624-1660
Answer: (B)
18. Leopold Bloom in Ulysses is
(A) a Great War veteran
(B) a Dublin bar owner
(C) a Jewish advertising agent
(D) an Irish nationalist
Answer: (C)
19. “Late capitalism”, by which is meant
accelerated technological development and the massive extension of intellectually
qualified labour, was first popularised by ______.
(A) Terry Eagleton
(B) Ernst Mandel
(C) Raymond Williams
(D) Stanley Fish
Answer: (B)
20. Which of the following arrangements is
in the correct chronological sequence?
(A) Native Son by Richard Wright –
Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison – Their Eyes Were Watching God
by Zora Neil Hurston – Another Country by
James Baldwin
(B) Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora
Neil Hurston – Native Son by Richard Wright – Invisible
Man by Ralph Ellison – Another Country by
James Baldwin
(C) Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison – Native
Son by Richard Wright – Another Country by James
Baldwin – Their Eyes Were Watching God by
Zora Neil Hurston
(D) Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora
Neil Hurston – Another Country by James Baldwin –
Native Son by Richard Wright – Invisible
Man by Ralph Ellison
Answer: (B)
21. Metaphor is so widespread that it is
often used as an umbrella term to include other
figures of speech such as metonyms which
can be technically distinguished from it in its
narrower usage.
Identify the metaphorical phrase in this
sentence:
(A) narrower usage
(B) technically distinguished
(C) figures of speech
(D) umbrella term
Answer: (C and D)
22. Along the shore of silver streaming
Thames;
Whose rutty bank, the which his river hems,
Was painted all with variable flowers,…
Fit to deck maidens’ bowers
And crown their paramours
Against their bridal day, which is not
long;
Sweet Thames! run softly till I end my
song.
(Spenser’s Prothalamion)
Another poet fondly recalls these lines but
cannot conceal their heavily ironic tone in:
(A) Marianne Moore’s “Spenser’s Ireland”
(B) Sylvia Plath’s “Morning Song”
(C) W.H. Auden’s “In Praise of Limestone”
(D) T.S. Eliot’s Waste Land
Answer: (D)
23. The tramp in Pinter’s first big hit,
The Caretaker, often travels under an
assumed name. It is
(A) Bernard Jenkins
(B) Roly Jenkins
(C) Jack Jenkins
(D) Peter Jenkins
Answer: (A)
24. Here is a list of early English plays
imitating Greek and Latin plays. Pick the odd one out:
(A) Gorboduc
(B) Tamburlaine
(C) Ralph Roister Doister
(D) Gammer Gurton’s Needle
Answer: (B)
25. Where does Act I Scene 1 of William
Congreve’s Way of the World open?
(A) A Chocolate-House
(B) A Pub
(C) A Carrefour
(D) The drawing room of Sir Willfull’s
mansion
Answer: (A)
26. While “a well-boiled icicle” for “a
well-oiled bicycle” is an example of Spoonerism, someone saying “Congenital
food” for ‘Continental food’ is an example of ______.
(A) Malaproprism
(B) Pleonasm
(C) Neologism
(D) Archaism
Answer: (A)
27. It is unimaginable that all the
following events happened in one year:
1. Arthur Evans discovered the first
European civilization; his excavations in Crete revealed a
culture that was far older than either Attic
Greece or Ancient Rome.
2. Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch published the
Oxford Book of English Verse.
3. Pablo Picasso stepped off the Barcelona
train at Gare d’ Orsay, Paris.
4. Max Planck unveiled the Quantum Theory.
5. Hugo de Vries identified what would later
come to be called genes.
6. Sigmund Freud published The
Interpretation of Dreams.
7. Coca-cola arrived in Britain.
Identify the year:
(A) 1899
(B) 1900
(C) 1901
(D) 1903
Answer: (B)
28. Brother to a Prince and fellow to a
beggar if he be found worthy.
This is the epigraph to
(A) T.S. Eliot’s “The Hollow Men”
(B) Rudyard Kipling’s “The Man Who Would be
the King”
(C) George Eliot’s Silas Marner
(D) E.M. Forster’s Howard’s End
Answer: (B)
29. Robert Graves’s “In Broken Images” ends
thus:
He in a new confusion of his understanding;
I in a new understanding of my confusion.
The figure of speech here is _______.
(A) Chiasmus
(B) Catachresis
(C) Inversion
(D) Zeugma
Answer: (A)
30. The phrase “leaves dancing” is an
example of ________.
(A) pathetic fallacy
(B) hyperbole
(C) pun
(D) conceit
Answer: (A)
31. At the end of The Great Gatsby, the
narrator Nick Carraway observes:
“They were careless people”. Who were they?
(A) Tom and Daisy
(B) The Wilsons
(C) Gatsby and his friends
(D) The people of East Egg
Answer: (A)
32. William Wordsworth’s statement of
purpose in publishing the Lyrical Ballads carries the following phrase.
(Complete the phrase correctly).
“to choose incidents from common life and
to relate or describe them, throughout, as far as possible, ______.”
(A) in a selection of language really used
by men.
(B) in a relation to language really used
by men.
(C) in a selection of language really used
by common man.
(D) in deference to language actually used
by men.
Answer: (A)
33. Match List – I with List – II according
to the code given below:
List – I (Novels)
i. Lord Jim
ii. To the Lighthouse
iii. A Passage to India
iv. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
List – II (Last lines)
1. ‘It was done; it was finished. Yes, she
thought laying down her brush in extreme fatigue, I have
had my vision.’
2. ‘April 27. Old father, old artificer,
stand me now and ever in good stead…’
3. ‘He feels it himself and says often that
he is “preparing to leave all this; preparing to leave,…”,
while he waves his hands sadly at his
butterflies.’
4. ‘ “No not yet,” and the sky said, “No,
not there”.’
Codes:
i ii iii iv
(A) 2 4 3 1
(B) 3 2 4 1
(C) 3 1 4 2
(D) 2 3 1 4
Answer: (C)
34. Identify the incorrect description/s of
“Sprung Rhythm” from the following:
1. This rhythm causes ideas to spring in
our minds – hence Sprung Rhythm.
2. In Sprung Rhythm the feet are of equal
length.
3. A foot may have one to four syllables in
Sprung Rhythm.www.netugc.com
4. Its metre is derived from the metre of
Anglo-Saxon poetry which was based on accent and linked by alliteration.
(A) 4 is incorrect.
(B) 1 & 4 are incorrect.
(C) 3 is incorrect.
(D) 1 is incorrect.
Answer: (D)
35. Who among the following proposes that
the unconscious comes into being only in language?
(A) Sigmund Freud
(B) Jacques Lacan
(C) Stuart Hall
(D) Paul de Man
Answer: (B)
36. The Elizabethan Settlement established
during the reign of Elizabeth I
I. ensured the supremacy of the Church of
England.
II. allowed Christians to acknowledge the
authority of the Pope.
III. allowed the extremer Protestants to be
part of the Anglican church.
IV. created a group known as the
Roundheads.
The correct combination according to the
code is:
(A) I and III are correct.
(B) I and II are correct.
(C) II and III are correct.
(D) III and IV are correct.
Answer: (A)
37. Which of the following poems by
Tennyson does NOT speak of old age and death?
(A) “The Beggar Maid”
(B) “The Lotus-Eaters”
(C) “Ulysses”
(D) “Tithonus”
Answer: (A)
38. One English poet addressing another:
Thy soul was like a Star, and dwelt apart;
Thou hast a voice whose sound was like the
sea:
Pure as the naked heavens, majestic, free,
So didst thou travel on life’s common way,
In cheerful godliness….
Whose lines are these? To whom are they
addressed?
(A) W.H. Auden – W.B. Yeats
(B) P.B. Shelley – William Blake
(C) William Wordsworth – John Milton
(D) Ben Jonson – William Shakespeare
Answer: (C)
39. Samuel Johnson’s Lives of Poets (1781)
was originally a series of introductions to the poets he wrote for a group of
London publishers. They were collected as:
(A) Lives of English Poets: Critical and
Biographical Essays.
(B) Prefaces, Biographical and Critical, to
the Works of English Poets.
(C) Notes, Biographical and Critical, on
the Works of English Poets.
(D) Lives of English Poets: Biographical
and Critical Notes.
Answer: (B)
40. Which of the following is NOT mentioned
in Northrop Frye’s four ‘generic plots’?
(A) The comic
(B) The tragic
(C) The lyric
(D) The ironic
Answer: (C)
41. Arrange the sections of The Waste Land
in the order in which they appear in the poem:
1. The Fire Sermon
2. Death by Water
3. A Game of Chess
4. What the Thunder Said
5. The Burial of the Dead
(A) 3, 2, 1, 5, 4
(B) 5, 1, 2, 3, 4
(C) 5, 2, 3, 1, 4
(D) 5, 3, 1, 2, 4
Answer: (D)
42. Sir Plume is a character in ____
(A) Dryden’s Absalom and Achitophel
(B) Congreve’s The Way of the World
(C) Pope’s The Rape of the Lock
(D) Farquhar’s The Beaux’ Strategem
Answer: (C)
43. Steeling herself to the murder, Lady
Macbeth calls on ______ to “unsex me here”.
(Macbeth I.5.39)
Choose the right option to fill in the blank:
(A) God
(B) the spirits of hell
(C) the angels in heaven
(D) no one in particular
Answer: (B)
44. You will find the following lines in an
English poem:
Thou by the Indian Ganges’ side
Shouldst rubies find; I by the side
Of Humber would complain.
Which poem? Who is the poet?
(A) “Lonely Hearts.” Wendy Cope
(B) “Holy Thursday.” William Blake
(C) “Tiger Mask Ritual.” Chitra Banerjee
Divakaruni
(D) “To His Coy Mistress.” Andrew Marvell
Answer: (D)
45. Teach me half the gladness
That thy brain must know,
Such harmonious madness
From my lips would flow
The world should listen then, as I am
listening now.
Whose lines are these? To whom are they
addressed?
(A) John Keats. The Nightingale
(B) P.B. Shelley. The Skylark
(C) William Wordsworth. The Wye Valley
(D) Robert Browning. The Grammarian
Answer: (B)
46. Match List – I with List – II according
to the code given below:
List – I (Novel)
i. Dombey and Son
ii. The Return of the Native
iii. Bleak House
iv. Tess
List – II (Major symbol)
1. fog
2. train
3. heath
4. mist
Codes:
i ii iii iv
(A) 2 3 1 4
(B) 4 2 3 1
(C) 2 3 4 1
(D) 1 3 4 1
Answer: (A)
47. The following postmodernist novel has
an unusual protagonist whose gender is not revealed. So much so, that we keep
wondering whether that person’s relationships are homo /hetero-sexual:
(A) The French Lieutenant’s Woman
(B) English Music
(C) Written on the Body
(D) Enduring Love
Answer: (C)
48. Which novel of Graham Greene in the
following list does NOT end in some form of suicide by the protagonist?
(A) The Heart of the Matter
(B) England Made Me
(C) Brighton Rock
(D) The Power and the Glory
Answer: (B)
49. Who among the following gave a happy
ending to King Lear?
(A) James Quin
(B) Nahum Tate
(C) Peg Woffington
(D) Charles Macklin
Answer: (B)
50. Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice
starts with the famous statement: “It is a truth universally acknowledged that
a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a life.”
As we get to read the novel this statement
seems to be made from the point of view of:
I. the surrounding families
II. Mrs Bennet
III. Mr Bennet
IV. The women of Jane Austen’s age and
society
Find out the correct combination according
to the code:
(A) I, II and III are correct.
(B) I, II and IV are correct.
(C) II, III and IV are correct.
(D) I, III and IV are correct.
Answer: (B)
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