ENG2603 Mock Exam PACK.
ENG2603 Mock Exam PACK. The Brish Seler Tune – ‘Oh what a row’; or, ‘The humours of a Steam-boat’ Oh! what a gay, what a rambling life a Seler’s leading! Spooring cale, doing bale, quite jocose; Winning, losing; Whigs abusing; shopping now, then muon breeding; Never fearing, persevering, on he goes! When to the Cape I first came out, in days of Charlie Somerset, My lands were neatly measured off, and reg’larly my number set; I strued round on my own ground, lord of a hundred acres, sir, And said I’d plough, I’d buy a cow, the butchers cut and bakers, sir. Oh! what a gay, &c. On Kowie’s banks I built a house, and made a snug locaon there; I fenc’d my lands with my own hands to keep all ght; The river rose, and fore my nose made awful desolaon there; The Kafirs stole my only cow away that night! I made a trip to Kafirland, in hopes to find my cow again, And tried to act the denst then, which no one can do now again; I drew the Kafir’s ivory teeth, at risk of hempen collar, sir. Which at Graham’s Town on the market brought me full 300 dollars, sir! Oh! what a gay, &c. My second go was but so so, although the trade was brisk enough; The patrols nearly boned me in a secret maze; I hid my load out of the road, and, faith, I just had risk enough, For this trade was hanging maer in those good old days! My stock-in-trade on pack-ox laid, I tried my luck at smouching then, But found the Boers were wide awake as Yorkshiremen at chousing them; They swept me some rock chrystals – gems, they swore, of purest water, sir; And for breeding stock, a scurvy lot of hamels and kapaters, sir! Oh! what a gay, &c. Of fortune’s frowns, smiles, ups, and downs, I had a great variety; I smouching drop. I open shop, the buy a farm; Doing charming with my farming, best with friends’ society, When all at once the Amakose break the charm! Assegaing, yelling, crying – murder! fire! and revelry! Stealing cale, bloody bale, every kind of devilry – Helter-skelter, seeking shelter, wives and children rustling in! Husbands wounded – lost confounded, tender friends are justling in! Oh! what a gay, &c. Hopes are blasted, pale and fasted, now reduced to beggary; Burnt locaons, public raons all we’ve le; Names abused, of climes accused by agents vile of whiggery, Any sympathy withheld, when of our all bere. Compensaon for spol’aon, aer such representaon, Seemed so fule, and inule, that ‘twas scouted by the naon! And that we’ve sll a dollar le, our thanks be to no sngy-man, Whose name’s a charm our souls to warm, – THE GOOD, THE BRAVE SIR BENJAMIN! Oh! what a gay, &c. Kafirs lauded and rewarded for their savage, fierce irrupon, By the folks of Downing-street and Ex’ter hall! Then no checking Boers from trekking, fleeing, seeing such corrupon; Hoentots and Fingoes, saucy vagrants all! Such delusion and confusion seldom are exhibited, When for convenience of the blacks the whites are stabbed and gibbeted! Yet, persevering through those ills, the storm again I’ve weathered, sir! My children married happy, and my nest again feathered sir! Oh! what a gay, &c. ’Tis four and twenty years, my friends, since first on Afric’s shore we landed! And retrospecons crowd my mind of that great day; Fear and doubt shut hope all out, for on a desert we seemed stranded, And dreary was our prospect then in Algoa Bay! View contrasted, while they lasted, mes of which I’m now relang And our happy meeng here, this great event commemorang! Then may our heart be grateful sll, that Heaven has so guarded us Through all our toilsome pilgrimage, and now so well rewarded us! Oh! what a gay, what a rambling life, a Seler’s leading! Spooring cale, doing bale, quite jocose; Winning, losing; Whigs abusing, shopping now, then cale breeding; Never fearing, persevering, on he goes! Queson 2: Nervous Condions Discuss how Nervous Condions portrays resistance to European colonialism. In your answer, pay parcular aenon to the role of tradion in the novel. Secon B Answer ONE queson in this secon for 50 marks. Queson 3: Seven Steps to Heaven “You are dead. Now you come here bothering me. Who do you think I am? God? You think I can bring you from the dead? No, it’s you that are dead. You are dead before dying. You are a nobody because there is nothing that marks you out as you. You are always trying to be somebody. You are always living in the shadow of other people’s words, ideas beliefs. That’s why you are here. It is not that you love me, that you wanted to empathize with me as they pumped bullets into me. You are here because without me you can’t be you.” (2007:41) Using the passage above as your starng point, comment on the relaonship between Sizwe and Thulani as depicted in the novel as a whole. Queson 4: A Raisin in the Sun Discuss how Walter Lee displays a sexist atude towards his sister Beneatha’s ambions. What stereotype of a woman is he imagining?
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- ENG2603 - Colonial And Postcolonial African Literatures (ENG2603)
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eng2603 colonial and postcolonial african literature