MATCHING I:
Presents nature as God's creation for man to enjoy. correct answers The Task
Times of lament are no more and the simplicity of rural life. correct answers The
Deserted Village
Teaches man to be sincere and not to be hypocritical. correct answers "To a Louse"
conflict between the beauty of nature and the depravity of man correct answers "Lines
Written in Early Spring"
Nature as a better teacher than man. correct answers The Tables Turned
A reflection on the death of Lucy. correct answers "A Slumber Did My Spirit Seal"
The power of Nature to impress our minds. correct answers "Expostulation and Reply"
All things prone to change. correct answers Mutability
Permanence in a world of change satisfied through art. correct answers "Ode on a
Grecian Urn"
poet's love for his homeland correct answers "My Native Land"
The love which should bind together all created things correct answers The Rime of the
Ancient Mariner
SHORT ANSWER:
Who is Scotland's greatest poet? correct answers Robert Burns*
Who created the historical novel? correct answers Sir Walter Scott*
Who is the greatest English prose satirist? correct answers Jonathan Swift*
Who is the Father of English Hymnody? correct answers Isaac Watts*
Who believed the creed "A thing of beauty is a joy forever"? correct answers John
Keats*
MATCHING II: Match the quotation with the work
"Say first, of God above or Man below,
What can we reason but from what we know?" correct answers "An Essay on Man"
"Have I not reason to lament