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____was the dominant figure in what came to be known as “the Movement,” a group of university poets, whose work was seen as counteracting not only the extravagances of modernism but also the influence of Dylan Thomas’s high-flown, apocalyptic rhetoric, and preferred a civil grammar and rational syntax over prophecy, suburban realities over mythmaking.

A. Semus Heaney
B. Philip Larkin
Carol Ann Duffy
Derek Walcott

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No other poet presents the welfare-state world of postwar Britain so vividly, so unsparingly, and so tenderly. “Poetry is an affair of sanity, of seeing things as they are,” ____ said; “I don’t want to transcend the commonplace, I love the commonplace life. Everyday things are lovely to me.”

A. Semus Heaney
B. Wole Soyinka
C. Philip Larkin
D. Ted Hughes

With “Digging,” placed appropriately as the first poem of his first book, ___ defined his territory. He dug into his memory, uncovering first his father and then, going deeper, his grandfather. This idea of poetry as an archaeological process of recovery took on a darker cast after the eruption of internecine violence in Northern Ireland in 1969 and 1972.

A. Carol Ann Duffy
B. Semus Heaney
C. Philip Larkin
D. Ted Hughes

Theatre of Absurd came into being because _______.

A. people were fed up with realism
B. it is funny and people enjoy it
C. it can reflect the cultural atmosphere of the contemporary era

Most of absurdist dramatists agree that human condition is absurd and without purpose, very much like the fate of ______.

Albert Camus
B. Sisyphus
C. Prometheus

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