Q01of 10
What is the primary purpose of the editorial notes presented in this text?
Q02of 10
In Note 10, the editor chooses to follow which source's reading of 'lore' and 'Dawns'?
Q03of 10
What does the editor identify as the structural reason for the comma after 'infiniteness' in line 206?
Q04of 10
The line 'One curse alone was spared—the name of God' illustrates which recurring theme in the editorial notes?
Q05of 10
Which editor consistently appears in the notes as a point of contrast because he favored the original 1813 text?
Q06of 10
In Note 8, the term 'reillumed' versus 'reillumined' represents what type of textual concern?
Q07of 10
How does the editor's tone toward Mrs. Shelley's editorial work best be described?
Q08of 10
The phrase 'exhaustless lore of human weal' versus 'exhaustless store of human weal' is an example of what poetic technique being debated?
Q09of 10
The editorial note about 'pride, or care' versus 'pride, nor care' in Note 12 reflects a concern primarily about which element of poetry?
Q10of 10
Based on the notes, Rossetti's editorial approach can best be characterized as
0 / 10 answered