A. They ran away.
B. They dropped dead.
C. They evaporated.
D. They dispersed.
A. Fifty.
B. Six hundred sixty-six.
C. Thousands.
D. We are never told.
A. They were annihilated.
B. They were damned to hell.
C. They turned into mist.
D. They flew out of their bodies.
A. Like drums.
B. The laughter of Life-in-Death.
C. A choir of archangels.
D. The Ancient Mariner’s crossbow when he shot it.
A. Because he is the protagonist.
B. Because Life-in-Death won his soul.
C. Because the Albatross protected him.
D. Because escaped timely.
A. A literary device in which a part signifies a whole.
B. A spirit.
C. The ugliest sin.
D. A fiendish spirit.
A. His domineering spirit.
B. His determination.
C. His frenzied soul.
D. His sin of killing the Albatross.
A. He believes that the Ancient Mariner is the living dead.
B. He cannot stand to listen quietly for so long without speaking.
C. He is afraid of him.
D. He wants to deceive the Ancient Mariner so that he can escape.
A. No, but he is condemned to a living death.
B. No, he never died.
C. Yes, he was saved by Albatross.
D. Yes, he was reincarnated.