Q01of 10
What is the central political event that directly inspired Shelley to write *Hellas* in 1821?
Q02of 10
Which dramatic figure is notably absent from Shelley's own printed list of Dramatis Personae in the 1822 edition?
Q03of 10
The quatrain at lines 729–732 of *Hellas*, beginning 'Revenge and Wrong bring forth their kind,' is identified by Dr. Garnett as an expansion of lines from which ancient Greek work?
Q04of 10
In the debate over line 728, what word did editor Rossetti originally substitute for the manuscript's word 'For,' believing it necessary for the rhyme scheme?
Q05of 10
Why were lines 1091–1093 replaced by asterisks in the original 1822 edition of *Hellas*?
Q06of 10
Which edition first restored the suppressed lines 1091–1093 to the public text before Mary Shelley's 1839 *Poetical Works*?
Q07of 10
The famous final chorus of *Hellas* is best described as expressing which overarching theme?
Q08of 10
As a lyrical drama, *Hellas* primarily frames its political vision through whose perspective and visions?
Q09of 10
Galignani's 1829 Paris edition introduced two variant readings in lines 1091–1093. Which of the following correctly identifies one of those variants compared to the restored standard text?
Q10of 10
The structural form of *Hellas* is best described as which of the following?
0 / 10 answered