Burnt Norton
1. What does the speaker state is eternally present in Part I of "Burnt Norton"?
(a) All of time.
(b) The future.
(c) Reality.
(d) The truth.
2. The speaker states, in the first part of "Burnt Norton," that what "might have been" is a(n) what?
(a) An unrealized actuality.
(b) A frivolous thought.
(c) A passive potency.
(d) A perpetual possibility.
3. The first part of "Burnt Norton" says that footfalls echo in what?
(a) Time future.
(b) The memory.
(c) The rose-garden.
(d) The bowl of rose-leaves.
4. What, described in Part I of "Burnt Norton," lays on the other side of the door that the speaker and his auditor never opened?
(a) Time future.
(b) The rose-garden.
(c) Possibility.
(d) The bird.
5. What is disturbed on the bowl of rose-leaves, as mentioned in the first part of "Burnt Norton"?
(a) Time future.
(b) Dust.
(c) Memory.
(d) The bird.
6. What inhabits the garden of "Burnt Norton"'s first part?
(a) Other times.
(b) Other birds.
(c) Other echoes.
(d) Other footfalls.
(read all 180 Multiple Choice Questions and Answers)
This section contains 5,089 words (approx. 17 pages at 300 words per page) |