A. Samson will not fight him.
B. He does not want to fight Samson.
C. He must hurry to catch up with Dalila.
D. He has been called back to his hometown of Gath.
A. Samson will not fight him.
B. He does not want to fight Samson.
C. He must hurry to catch up with Dalila.
D. He has been called back to his hometown of Gath.
A. plain
B. luminescent
C. Latinate
D. Sophistic
A. The fall of the Son
B. The fall of the Rebel Angels
C. The fall of God
D. The death of Michael
A. Pastoral elegy
B. Prose polemic
C. Blank verse tragedy
D. Epic
A. Heaven
B. Hell
C. Chaos
D. Sunshine
A. In “Samson,” Harapha is Samson’s enemy, but he is not in “Judges.”
B. In “Samson,” Samson is a Jew, but he is not in “Judges.”
C. In “Samson,” Samson marries the Woman of Timnah, but not in “Judges.”
D. In “Samson,” Samson never worships Dagon, but he does in “Judges.”
A. Three and Four
B. Five and Six
C. Eight and Nine
D. Eleven and Twelve
A. the Chorus has just stated it hates this kind of lavish, external beauty.
B. Samson hates this kind of lavish, external beauty.
C. Dalila usually dresses in a more understated Puritan manner.
D. Samson is blind.
A. Their surnames
B. The names of pagan gods
C. The names of foreign countries
D. The names of the angels they will become
A. William Blake
B. Alfred Lord Tennyson
C. Elizabeth Barrett Browning
D. T.S. Eliot