____'s poem “The Convergence of the Twain,” which is about the Titanic disaster, illustrates the perversity of fate, the disastrous or ironic coincidence of events.
A. Eliot
B. Houseman
C. Thomas Hardy
D. William Butler Yeats
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the beautiful actor and Irish nationalist Maud Gonne, with whom W. B. Yeats was desperately in love for many years, but who persistently refused to marry him. She became the subject of many of his early love poems, such as ____, “No Second Troy” and “A Prayer for My Daughter.”
A. “The Lake Isle of Innisfree”
B. “Easter, 1916”
C. “Leda and the Swan”
D. “When You are Old”
T. S. Eliot's ____, as a landmark of modernist poetry, is a series of scenes and images with no author’s voice intervening to tell us where we are but with the implications developed through multiple contrasts and through analogies with older literary works often referred to in a distorted quotation or half-concealed allusion.
Ash Wednesday
B. The Waste Land
C. “The Love Song of Alfred Prufrock”
D. “The Second Coming”
____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
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