A. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
B. Virginia Woolf
C. Matthew Arnold
D. Carl Jung
A. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
B. Virginia Woolf
C. Matthew Arnold
D. Carl Jung
A. Aristotle
B. Dante
C. Longinus
D. Plato
A. A character who is always cheerful and gay
B. A character who is by nature melancholy
C. A character whose temper is determined by the predominance of one out of the four fluids in the human body
D. An eccentric person
A. F. R. Leavis
B. Allen Tate
C. John Crowe Ransom
D. R. P. Blackmur
A. Drama
B. Narrative mode
C. Poetry
D. Dialogue
A. Mimetic approach
B. Formalist approach
C. Historical approach
D. Psychological approach
A. Dryden
B. Pope
C. Dr. Johnson
D. Addison
A. Joseph Addison
B. Dr. Johnson
C. Coleridge
D. Matthew Arnold
A. Begin your paper with an introduction that identifies the purpose of the paper and the text you are addressing.
B. Compose topic sentences (four or five, perhaps) that support, explore, demonstrate, or illustrate your thesis.
C. Select specific passages in the text of the story that help you to develop each topic sentence.
D. Build your paper to a climax; save your most engaging or important topic sentence for discussion last.
A. Plato
B. Aristotle
C. Longinus
D. Horace