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Poets and Poetry (Part One) Quiz

Question: Who wrote Seven Types of Ambiguity, one of the most influential works about poetry during the first half of the 20th century?
Answer: Seven Types of Ambiguity (1930; rev. ed. 1953), by William Empson, is one of the most influential works of literary criticism about poetry during the first half of the 20th century. It is essentially a close examination of poetic texts. Empson’s contribution in this work was his suggestion that uncertainty or the overlap of meanings in the use of a word is an enrichment of poetry.
Question: Which poet introduced the ideas of Renaissance theorists to England in his treatise The Defence of Poesie?
Answer: About 1582 Sir Philip Sidney wrote The Defence of Poesie, which introduced the ideas of Renaissance theorists to England in the form of an urbane and eloquent plea for the social value of imaginative fiction.
Question: Which is the earliest known English play written in blank verse?
Answer: The earliest known English play in blank verse is Gorboduc by Thomas Sackville and Thomas Norton. It was first performed in 1561.
Question: Whose book-length poem Omeros retells Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey in a 20th-century Caribbean setting?
Answer: The West Indian poet and playwright Derek Walcott wrote Omeros (1990), which is a retelling of components of Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey.
Question: What is the name of the Persian national epic poem, which was completed in 1010?
Answer: Ferdowsī was the author of the Shāh-nāmeh (“Book of Kings”), the Persian national epic. He gave the work its final and enduring form, although he based his poem mainly on an earlier prose version. The Shāh-nāmeh, which was 35 years in the making, was finally completed in 1010.
Question: What poets wrote the libretto for Igor Stravinsky’s opera The Rake’s Progress (1951)?
Answer: W.H. Auden and Chester Kallman collaborated on the libretto for Igor Stravinsky’s opera The Rake’s Progress. They together rehabilitated the art of the opera libretto. Their other collaborations included Elegy for Young Lovers (1961) and The Bassarids (1966), for Hans Werner Henze, and Love’s Labour’s Lost for Nicolas Nabokov.
Question: Which poem by John Gower runs to some 33,000 lines?
Answer: John Gower’s long poem Confessio amantis (begun c. 1386) runs to some 33,000 lines in octosyllabic couplets. The poem is significant because many Classical myths (especially those deriving from Ovid’s Metamorphoses) make the first of their numerous appearances in English literature in the Confessio.
Question: Which heroic poem, named after a Scandinavian hero, is considered the earliest European vernacular epic?
Answer: Beowulf is the earliest European vernacular epic, and it is the highest achievement of Old English literature. It deals with events of the early 6th century and is believed to have been composed between 700 and 750. Although originally untitled, it was later named after the Scandinavian hero Beowulf, whose exploits and character provide its connecting theme.
Question: Who wrote the poem “The Wild Swans at Coole”?
Answer: William Butler Yeats’s poem “The Wild Swans at Coole” was published in June 1917 in The Little Review; it was also published in a collection also titled The Wild Swans at Coole in 1917 (and again, in an enlarged edition, in 1919).
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The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City; gift of Arthur A. Houghton Jr., 1970 (accession no. 1970.301.2); www.metmuseum.org
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City; gift of Arthur A. Houghton Jr., 1970 (accession no. 1970.301.2); www.metmuseum.org