Literature-In-English 1 - Objective
Section A
Answer all questions in this section
Part 1: General Knowledge of Literature
- A situation where an audience is aware of an action a character is ignorant of is ......
- dramatic irony
- comic relief
- aside
- satire
- A fictional prose which is neither a hovel nor a short story is a/an ......
- allegory
- fable
- novella
- novelette
- ' Condensed use of language is a dominant feature of ...... .
- comedy
- poetry
- prose
- tragedy
- The sudden reversal of a character’s fortune in a literary work is ........
- denouement
- hamartia
- hubris
- Peripeteia
- The underlined words illustrate ......
- hyperbole
- irony
- metonymy
- paradox
- hands and feet in line illustrate.......
- contrast
- litotes
- personification
- synecdoche
- His pen was like the breath of life exemplifies.......
- bathos
- pathos
- satire
- simile
- Comic relief occurs in.......
- comedies
- pastorals
- romance
- tragedies
- One week of fasting makes one weak is an example of......
- apostrophe
- paradox
- pun
- sarcasm
- Students rarely read Julius Caesar these days illustrates.........
- caesura.
- eponym
- oxymoron
- zeugma.
- In literature, the term poetic justice applies to.....
- a story that ends well.
- characters that are spared death
- the development of a good plot
- the rewarding of good characters and the punishing of bad ones
- Ascribing human moods to nature, as in a playful breeze illustrates .......
- humor
- pathetic fallacy.
- symbolism
- transferred epithet
- The end of a performance is followed by.......
- a curtain call
- a curtain raiser
- epilogue
- interlude
Read the lines and answer 14 - The underlined words illustrate ......
- assonance
- consonance
- onomatopoeia
- repetition
- A short poem with a witty or sarcastic ending is a/an .
- ballad
- allegory
- epigram
- panegyric
- . The big boulder blasted the house illustrates A. alliteration.
- Option a
- Option b
- C. irony.
- paradox
- The dominant literary device used in the lines is . . .
- euphemism
- hyperbole
- paradox
- understatement
- The feeling of the narrator in the extract is one of .......
- confusion
- fatigue
- love
- joy
- Which of the following is written by an African playwright?
- She Stoops to Conquer
- . A Raisin in the Sun
- . Lonely Days
- The Blood of a stranger Drums
- Which of the following is written by a Non-African poet?
- Option a
- The Dining Table
- The Schoolboy
- The Panic of Growing Older
Read the extract below and answer Questions 5 to 7
With the pen, he wrote kings into reality
With his words, kingdoms arose,
Those same words slaves inhaled
Their hands building walls, their feet tromping territories
His pen was like the breath of life
Marching along fifty score strong
Great hearted gentlemen singing this song
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Part 2: Unseen Prose and Poetry
Read the passage below and answer questions 21 to 25
On, on, on, over the countless miles of angry space roll the long heaving billows. Mountains and caves are here, for what is now the one is now the other; then all is but a boiling heap of rushing water. Pursuit, and flight and mad return of wave on wave, and savage struggle, ending up in a spouting up of foam that whitens the black night; incessant change of place and form and hue; constancy In nothing but eternal strife.
On, on, on, they roll and darker grows the night; and louder howls the ‘wind and more clamorous and fierce become the million voices in the sea, when the wild cry goes forth upon the storm, ‘A ship!’
- The most suitable title for the passage is......
- A Savage struggle at Night
- At Sea on a Stormy Night
- The Long Heaving Waves
- The Million Voice in the Sea
- The predominant use of long vowels in the first sentence heightens the .... of the waves.
- anger
- expanse
- great noise
- endless movement
- The writer’s attitude to the scene is one of .......
- anxiety
- awe
- contempt
- indifference
- The expression million voices is used as .... .
- conceit
- euphemism
- hyperbole
- metonymy
- A ship in the last line symbolizes.......
- despair
- hope
- pirates
- sailors
- The theme is about the poet’s . ....
- broken love affairs
- fear ‘of the stilly night
- sleepless night
- yearning for happier times gone by
- . The theme of the poem is presented contrast.....
- assonance
- contrast
- paradox
- repetition
- The poet’s unhappiness are ......
- light and night
- . light and shone
- night and dimm’d
- shone and dimm’d
- The poet refers to memory as being 'fond' and 'sad' ......
- cheers and smiles
- love and joy
- sorrow and pity
- smiles and tears
- The meaning of the expression, Ere slumber's chain has bound me is ......
- after I wake up
- before I sleep
- before I dream
- Since I cannot sleep
Read the poem and answer Questions 26 to 30.
Oft in the stilly night
Ere slumber’s chain has bound me
Fond memory brings the light of other days around me:
The smiles, the tears of boyhood years.
The words of love then spoken;
The eyes that shone How dimm’d and gone
The cheerful hearts now broken!
Thus in the stilly night
Ere slumber’s chain has bound me.
Sad memory brings the light of other days around me.
Section B
Answer all questions in this section
William Shakespear:_Othello
Read the extract and answer Questions 31 to 35
Zounds sir, y are robbed! For shame, put on your gown
Your heart is burst, you have lost half your soul
Even now, now, very now, an old black ram
Is tupping your white ewe. Arise, arise!
Awake the snorting citizens with the bell,
Or else the devil will make a grandsire of you.
Arise I say!
(Act I, Scene One, Lines 83 - 89)
- The speaker is .......
- Cassio
- Iago
- Lodovico
- Roderigo
- The listener's initial reaction to the speech is one of .......
- anger
- defiance
- disbelief
- regret
- The underlined expression implies an attitude of .......
- callousness
- hypocrisy
- racism
- tribalism
- ...y' are robbed! Refers to
- Brabantio's rejection of Othello
- Desdemona's stout defense of Othello
- Iago's stealing of Roderigo's purse
- Othello's elopement with Desdemona
- The speaker is.......
- at the citadel of Cyprus
- in front Brabantio's house
- in the council chamber
- outside the sagittary
Read the extract and answer Questions 36 to 40.
- The speaker is.......
- Casio
- Iago
- Duke
- Roderigo
- The speaker is addressing.......
- Cassio
- Iago
- Othello
- Roderigo
- The mood is that of.......
- deceit.
- envy
- hatred
- regret
- ....so good a commander refers to
- Brabantio.
- Duke
- Othello
- Roderigo
- The underlined expression exemplifies .....
- antithesis
- apostrophe
- chiasmus
- euphemism
- ... he... referred to by Speaker X, is .......
- Brabantio
- Gratiano
- Montano
- Lodovico
- ...do a desperate turn means .....
- commit suicide
- confront Duke
- disown Desdemona
- kill Othello
- Speaker Y’s speech shows that .......
- Cassio is to blame
- Emilia is to blame
- he is unrepentant
- she is regretful.
- Speaker Y has just ........
- discovered lago’s plan
- killed Desdemona
- ordered the lago
- promoted Cassio
- Just after this dialogue ........
- Cassio is killed
- Emilia realizes her culpability
- lago gloats over his success
- Roderigo fights Cassio
Read the extract and answer Questions 46 to 50. - The speaker is .......
- Bianca
- Cassio
- Desdemona
- Emilia
- The speaker has just been threatened by’......
- Cassio
- Iago
- Lodovico
- Othello
- What has-just happened is that ......
- Emilia has confirmed her mistress’s guilt
- Iago has openly confessed his crime
- Othello has murdered his wife
- Roderigo has realized Iago is a fraud.
- Soon after this, the speaker.....
- attempts to run away
- is arrested by Lodovico.
- is killed by Iago
- shows remorse
- This stage of the play is known as the...........
- climax
- conflict.
- denouement
- exposition.
I will rather sue to be despised than to deceive so good a commander with so slight, so drunken, and so indiscreet an officer. Drunk! And speak parrot! And squabble! Swagger! Swear! And discourse fustian with one’s own shadow! O thou invisible spirit of wine, if thou hast no name to be known by, let us call thee devil! (Act II, Scene Three, lines 262-267)
Read The extract and questions 41 to 45.
Speaker X: ... Did he live now,
This sight would make him do a desperate turn;
Yea, curse his better angel from his side,
And fall to reprobation.
Speaker Y: is pitiful; but yet Iago knows
That she with Cassio hath the act of shame
A thousand times committed. Cassio confessed it;
And she gratify his amorous works
(Act V, Scene Two, line 204-211)
O thou dull Moor, that handkerchief thou speak’st of
I found by fortune, and did give my husband;
For often with a solemn earnestness
More than indeed belonged to such a trifle-
He begged of me to steal’t.
(Act V, Scene Two, lines 223 - 221)
Literature-In-English 2 - Prose
Answer two questions in all; one from each section.
Develop not fewer than five points in your answers.
Section A - African Prose
Answer one question only from this section
-
AMMA DARKO: Faceless
- Comment on Fofo's visit to Maa Tsuru
- To what extent are men portrayed as oppressors of women in the novel? BAYO ADEBOWALE: Lonely Days
- How does Alani reject his ancestry in the novel?
- Examine the advice of the three widows to Yaremi in the novel
Section B - NonCitadeln Prose
Answer one question only from this section
-
RICHARD WRIGHT: Native Son
- Comment on Bigger's last moments with Max
- Examine Bigger's visit to Bessie in the Novel HORACLE WALPOLE: The Castle of Otranto
- Assess the relationship between fathers and their children in the novel
- Comment on the presence of ghosts and spirit in the novel
Literature-In-English 3 - Drama and Poetry
Develop not fewer than five points in your answers.
Section A - African Drama
Answer one question only from this section
-
DELE CHARLEY: The Blood of a stranger
- Compare Kindo and his father in the play
- Examine Wara's encounter with soko in the play FRANK OGODO OGBECHE: Harvest of corruption
- Examine Ogeyi as a deeply religious person in the play
- Account for the downfall of chief in the play
Section B - Non-African Drama
Answer one question only from this section
-
LORRAINE HAN SBERRY: A Raising in the sun
- Consider the role of Mrs. Johnson in development of the plot
- Account for Walter's expectations in the play OLIVER GOLDSMITH: She Stoops to Conquer
- Asses Marlow and Hasting's first encounter with Mr. Hardcastle
- Comment on Tony's attitude toward Mr. and Mrs. Hardcastle
Section A - African Poetry
Answer one question only from this section
- How does the diction convey the theme of Adeoti's Ambush?
- Discuss the theme of accommodation in the Anvil and the Hammer
Section B - Non-African Poetry
Answer one question only from this section
- Examine God's reasoning in The Pulley
- How does the image of caged bird explain the boy's experiences in The Schoolboy?