A. Sincere and heartfelt
B. Mocking and satirical
C. Mournful and dark
D. Polemic and dry
A. Sincere and heartfelt
B. Mocking and satirical
C. Mournful and dark
D. Polemic and dry
A. Celebration of the imagination
B. Engagement with nature
C. The use of symbolism
D. The use of allegory
A. Fanny Brawne
B. Dorothy Wordsworth
C. Mary Shelley
D. Mary Keats
A. Lord Byron and John Clare
B. William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. John Keats and William Blake
D. Lord Byron and William Blake
A. William Wordsworth
B. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. William Blake
D. John Keats
A. Arrogance
B. Nihilism
C. Good spirits
D. Dark humor
A. William Wordsworth
B. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
C. William Blake
D. Lord Byron
A. Percy Shelley
B. John Keats
C. Lord Byron
D. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
A. France’s war with a foreign nation
B. The mass execution of enemies of the revolution
C. Napoleon’s rise to power
D. The death of the king of France
A. The passion between a husband and wife
B. The loss of innocence
C. The horrors of the French Revolution
D. How poets can bring about political revolution