Q01of 10
What is the rhyme scheme of this sonnet?
Q02of 10
Who is addressed directly as 'Minion of grandeur' in the poem?
Q03of 10
Which two earlier poets does Keats invoke as companions of Hunt's imagination during imprisonment?
Q04of 10
The image of 'the sky-searching lark' primarily functions to convey what quality about Hunt?
Q05of 10
What does Keats mean by the phrase 'regions of his own' in line 12?
Q06of 10
The volta, or turn in argument, occurs at which point in the poem?
Q07of 10
The tone of the closing rhetorical question—'Who shall his fame impair / When thou art dead'—is best described as
Q08of 10
Why was Leigh Hunt originally sent to prison, according to the poem's title and context?
Q09of 10
The phrase 'Culling enchanted flowers' is best understood as a metaphor for Hunt doing what?
Q10of 10
Which literary technique is most prominently used in the lines 'Think you he did wait? / Think you he nought but prison walls did see'?
0 / 10 answered