A. the monarchy, in the person of Charles II
B. the dominance of the Tory Party
C. the “Book of Common Prayer”
D. toleration of religious dissidents
A. the monarchy, in the person of Charles II
B. the dominance of the Tory Party
C. the “Book of Common Prayer”
D. toleration of religious dissidents
A. wit
B. sprezzatura
C. naturalism
D. gusto
A. Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley’s Frankenstein
B. William Worsworth’s Lyrical Ballads
C. John Keats’s “To Autumn”
D. all but C
A. a French revolutionary
B. a Greek or Roman mythological figure
C. a monster fabricated in a laboratory
D. All would have been appropriate protagonists for a Romantic literary text.
A. Spenser
B. John Gower
C. Geoffrey Chaucer
D. Langland
A. Kubla Khan
B. Hellas
C. The Phoenix and the Turtle
D. The Castaway
A. John Clare
B. John Keats
C. Robert Burns
D. A and C only
A. Anderson
B. Branwell
C. Richard
D. Pearson
A. troubadour
B. skald
C. chorister
D. bard
A. formal diplomatic relations with China
B. the exploitation of colonial resources, labor, and the slave trade
C. the creation of the bourgeois novel as a commodity
D. the union of England and Wales with Scotland