The oracle warns us that we we have left our pot unwatched, and our food now burns.'
This statement in The Gods Are Not To Blame refers to
Answer
(A)
the killing of Adetusa
2
'...the toad likes water but not when the water is boiling'. King Odewale in the Gods Are Not To Blame uses this proverb to explain why he
Answer
(A)
he exiled himself from the home of his supposed parents.
3
Baba Fakunle: How much did he give you boy?
Boy: Ten cowries, Baba.
Baba Fakunle: Hand him back nine.
The order to return nine cowries was given by Baba Fakunle because he
Answer
(D)
wanted to emphasize that the messanger of Olodumare takes only one cowrie.
4
''When the frog in front falls in a pit, others behind takes caution... When crocodiles eat their own eggs, what will they will they not do to the flesh of a frog?''
In the context of The Gods Are Not To Blame, the person who made this statement is alleging that king Adetusa
Answer
(C)
was killed by the people of Kutuje
5
Odewale shifts the blame for his tragedy from the gods to himself and claims that his tragedy is a result of his own weakness. The weakness he claims is love of
Answer
(C)
his tribe
6
The treatment meted out to Cinna the poet in Julius Caesar shows
Answer
(B)
Shakespeare's use of mistaken identity for comic effect in the play
7
The specific case cited by Antony in his funeral oration to show that Caesar was not as ambitious as Brutus made him out to be, was that Caesar had
Answer
(C)
thrice refused the crown during theb feast of Luperical
8
Shakespeare based the story of Julius Caesar on
Answer
(A)
actual historical records
9
'...He would be crown'd.
How that may change his nature, there's the question
It is the bright day that brings forth the adder.
And that craves wary walking...'
According to this passage, the crowning of Julius Caesar is
Answer
(D)
something to be approached with great caution
10
In Julius Caesar, one occasion when the misunderstanding of the ordinary people of Rome caused a big problem was
Answer
(B)
at the capitol when Brutus and Antony addressed the Romans
11
In Mission To Kala, Medza regarded himself as a professional failure because he
Answer
(A)
he did not seem to have any particular plans forn his life
12
Medza's Mission To Kala was important mainly because it
Answer
(D)
made him discover the realities of the condition of colonized people.
13
The attitude of the young men of Kala towards their chief can be described as
Answer
(A)
disdainful
14
'Why the hell can't some of you caught him for me
Are you going to let a boy make a public laughing stock of his own father?
The speaker of these words is the father of
Answer
(D)
Medza.
15
From Madza's behavior after his return to Kala
it can be deduced that the most important lesson he learned from his sojourn in Kala is that
Answer
(B)
every man is free to set his own goals and chart his own course in life
16
The protagonist of Charles Dicken's Great Expectations is
Answer
(D)
Pip.
17
The effect of Pip's association with the inmates of Satis house was made to make him
Answer
(C)
aspire to improve his education and make himself less common
18
Joe Gargery is important in Great Expectations mainly because he
Answer
(A)
is used as a foil to Pip
19
When Mr. Jagger''s told Joe Gargery to ''bear in mind, that Brag is a good dog, but Holdfast is a better'', what he meant was that
Answer
(B)
it was better to hold fast on one''s beliefs than to brag about them
20
In Great Expectations, Pip's reaction to the news that his fortune had been bestowed on him by Magwitch was
Answer
(A)
a sense of disillusionment
21
The dominant mood in J.P. Clark's 'Night Rain' is that of
Answer
(C)
joy
22
The impression created of the rain in J.P. Clark's 'Night Rain' is that of
Answer
(B)
an invading but paradoxically welcome force
23
From the poem itself, it is easy to tell that J.P. Clark's Abiku' is set in
Answer
(B)
a hut in a riverine village
24
The tone of Wole Soyinka's 'Abiku is
Answer
(A)
arrogant and cynical
25
Which of the following statement is NOT true of the two 'Abiku' poems by J.P Clark and Wole Soyinka?
Answer
(A)
in each of the two poems, the voice of the Abiku is heard
26
In the poem 'The Vultures', David Diop suggests that the Christians missionaries were agents of
Answer
(D)
colonialism.
27
'The Vultures built in the shadow of their talons
The blood-stained monument of tutelage.'
The image used in the above lines associates the civilizing missions with
Answer
(B)
violence and oppression
28
Much of the poetic effect of Birago Diop's 'Viaticum' is gained by the poet's use of
Answer
(A)
repetition of symbolic references
29
The gurgling drums
Echo the stars
The forest howls
And between the tress
The dark sun appears.
The dominant figure of speech in the above lines from Lenrie Peter's 'We Have Come Home' is
Answer
(D)
personification.
30
The theme of Gabriel Okara's 'Piano and Drums' is usually summed up in the phrase
Answer
(A)
clash of cultures
31
Tunde's long and vigorous speech was followed by a deafening silence.
The phrase deafening silence is used as a figure of speech called
Answer
(A)
oxymoron
32
'No; This my hand will rather
The multitudinous seas incarnadine
Making the green and red .'
In the above lines the figure of speech used is
Answer
(C)
hyperbole
33
When the speech is written so as to be understood in one way by a certain character, while the audience or another character understands it to have some secret and special meaning, the literary device used in this context is called
Answer
(A)
dramatic irony
34
The epilogue in a play refers to the
Answer
(B)
tail-piece
35
Which of the following is NOT a form of poetic expression
Answer
(A)
Sestet
36
Reversal of fortune as used in the criticism of a literary work describes the
Answer
(D)
sudden change in the fate of the central character.
37
Which of the following could be said to be a permanent feature of a poem?
Answer
(C)
Rhythm
38
Which of the following terms is exclusive to drama?
Answer
(D)
Soliloquy.
39
The literary device which uses ridicule to correct social ills is known as
Answer
(A)
satire
40
A poem of mourning and dedicated written on the death of an individual is called
Answer
(A)
am elegy
41
A poem written on a grand theme, in an appropriately grand style, dealing with heroic figures is called
Answer
(C)
an epic
42
Characterization in a novel means the
Answer
(B)
mode of presenting the fictional individuals
43
'' It was dawn, and the windows were dark except for the Workmen cafes. The sky was like a avast flat wall of cobalt, with roofs and spires of black paper pasted upon it. Drowsy men were sweeping the pavements with ten-foot brooms, and ragged families picking over the dustbins. Workmen and girls with piece of chocolate in one hand and bread in the other were pouring into the railway station.'
The picture presented above is one of
Answer
(D)
sordid industrial town.
44
Much madness is divinest sense
To a discerning eye;
Much sense is starkest madness.
'This the majority
In this, as all, prevails.
Assent, and you are sane;
Demur,-you're straightway dangerous,
And handled with a chain.
This poem reflects the
Answer
(A)
tyranny of the majority
45
The bustle in a house
The morning after death
Is solemnest of industries
Enacted upon earth-
The sweeping up the heart
And putting love away
We shall not want to use again
Until eternity.
The predominant mood of this poem is best captured by the words