Chapter 159. Quiz for Global Viewpoints

159.1 British and Canadian Poetry of the Great War

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Chapter 28: World War and Revolution 1914–1929
Quiz for Global Viewpoints: British and Canadian Poetry of the Great War

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Question 159.1

Correct. The answer is c. Of these three poets, only Owen offered a critique of the war, suggesting that young men were dying for a lie.
Incorrect. The answer is c. Of these three poets, only Owen offered a critique of the war, suggesting that young men were dying for a lie.
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Question 159.2

Correct. The answer is a. Brooks presented English soldiers as both a product of their nation and its embodiment.
Incorrect. The answer is a. Brooks presented English soldiers as both a product of their nation and its embodiment.
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Question 159.3

Correct. The answer is d. McCrae’s dead urged the living to “take up our quarrel with the foe” and complete the task that they began.
Incorrect. The answer is d. McCrae’s dead urged the living to “take up our quarrel with the foe” and complete the task that they began.
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Question 159.4

Correct. The answer is c. Much of Owen’s poem centered on a detailed description of the horror of a gas attack.
Incorrect. The answer is c. Much of Owen’s poem centered on a detailed description of the horror of a gas attack.
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Question 159.5

Correct. The answer is b. Owen contrasted the horrific reality of death in modern war with the vision of glorious death encapsulated in the Latin motto “Dulce et decorum est [It is sweet and fitting] Pro patria mori [To die for one’s country].”
Incorrect. The answer is b. Owen contrasted the horrific reality of death in modern war with the vision of glorious death encapsulated in the Latin motto “Dulce et decorum est [It is sweet and fitting] Pro patria mori [To die for one’s country].”
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