A. Seamus Heaney
B. Jane Austen
C. Robinson Crusoe
D. William Blake
A. Pain
B. Suffering
C. Remedy or Relief
D. Consciousness
C. Remedy or Relief
A. To “Restore” or Re-establish”
B. To “Cover”
C. To “Enhance”
D. To “Gain”
A. To “Restore” or Re-establish”
A. To covey message
B. The attraction power
C. The wording of poetry
D. The restorative power of poetry
D. The restorative power of poetry
A. Reality of human life
B. Imaginative transformation of human life
C. Modernity of human life
D. Bad impact on human life
B. Imaginative transformation of human life
A. Did reject the social tradition of Britain
B. Did not reject the poetic tradition of Britain
C. Did reject the poetic tradition of Britain
D. Did not reject the rules of Britain
B. Did not reject the poetic tradition of Britain
A. Politics
B. Culture
C. Religion
D. Friendship
A. Politics
A. Predictable
B. Unsurprising
C. Occasion
D. Surprise
D. Surprise
A. Madness and poverty
B. Love and privacy
C. People and government
D. Happiness and loyalty
A. Madness and poverty