compelled to seek their Livelihood by Begging, Robbing, Stealing, Cheating,
Pimping, Forswearing, Flattering, Suborning, Forging, Gaming, Lying,
Fawning, Hectoring, Voting, Scribling, Stargazing, Poysoning, Whoring,
Canting, Libelling,
Free-thinking, and the like Occupations: Every one of
which Terms, I was at much Pains to make him understand.
E) I told the Christian reader – I say Christian – hoping he is one – and if he
is not, I am sorry for it – and only beg he will consider the matter with
himself, and not lay the blame entirely upon this book, - I told him, Sir – for
in good truth, when a man is telling a story in the strange way I do mine, he is
obliged continually to be going backwards and forwards to keep all tight
together in the reader’s fancy – which, for my own part, if I did not take heed
to do more than at first, there is so much unfixed and equivocal matter starting
up, with so many breaks and gaps in it, - and so
little service do the stars
afford which, nevertheless, I hang up in some of the darkest passages,
knowing that the world is apt to lose its way, with all the lights the sun itself
at noonday can give it – and now, you see, I am lost myself! – But ’tis my
father’s fault; and whenever my brains come to be dissected, you will
perceive, without spectacles, that he has left a large uneven thread, as you
sometimes see in an unsalable piece of cambric,
running along the whole
length of the web.
20. By nature trees do rot when they are grown.
And plums and apples thoroughly ripe do fall,
And corn and grass are in their season mown,
And time brings down what is both strong and tall.
But plants new set to be eradicate,
And buds new blown, to have so short a date,
Is by His hand alone that guides nature and fate.
253
The stanza contrasts
A) sowing the seeds and reaping the harvest
B) the wages of sin and the rewards of righteousness
C) geologic time and the normal span of
a human life
D) cycles of mutability in the natural world and the permanence of the
afterlife
E) death as a result of natural process and death as a result of divine
intervention
21. As used in line 5, ‘eradicate’ is
A) a present indicative
B) a past participle
C)a subjunctive mood
D)
an infinitive form
E) an imperative form
22. The stanza is from
A) John Crowe Ransom’s
Bells for John Whiteside’s Daughter
B) Walt Whitman’s
When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d
C) Emily Dickinson’s
I felt a Funeral, in my Brain
D) Wallace Stevens’
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