Chapter 3 The Romantic Period
¡¡¡¡I. Choose the right answer£º
¡¡¡¡1. The Romantic Movement expressed a more or less______¡¡attitude toward the existing social and political conditions.
¡¡¡¡A.positive
¡¡¡¡B.negative
¡¡¡¡C.neutral
¡¡¡¡D.indifferent
¡¡¡¡Answer£º B £¨P160£©
¡¡¡¡2. It is _____who established the cult of the individual¡¡and championed the freedom of the human spirit.
¡¡¡¡A.Jean Jacques Rousseau
¡¡¡¡B.Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
¡¡¡¡C.Edmund Burke
¡¡¡¡D.Thomas Paine
¡¡¡¡Answer£º A £¨P157£©
¡¡¡¡3. The two major novelists of the English Romantic Period¡¡are _____and Walter Scott.
¡¡¡¡A.Washington Irving
¡¡¡¡B.Jane Austen
¡¡¡¡C.Herman Melville
¡¡¡¡D.Charles Dickens
¡¡¡¡Answer£º B £¨P165£©
¡¡¡¡4. _____defines the poet as "man speaking to men£¬"¡¡and poetry as "the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings£¬¡¡which originates in emotion recollected in tranquility."
¡¡¡¡A.William Blake
¡¡¡¡B.William Wordsworth
¡¡¡¡C.Samuel Taylor Coleridge
¡¡¡¡D.John Keats
¡¡¡¡Answer£º B £¨P161£©
¡¡¡¡5. For the Romantics£¬ ____is not only the major source of¡¡poetic imagery£¬ but also provides the dominant subject matter.
¡¡¡¡A.love
¡¡¡¡B.man
¡¡¡¡C.nature
¡¡¡¡D.death
¡¡¡¡Answer£º C £¨P162£©
¡¡¡¡6. In the Romantic period£¬ ____is the most prosperous literary¡¡form.
¡¡¡¡A.prose
¡¡¡¡B.poetry
¡¡¡¡C.fiction
¡¡¡¡D.play
¡¡¡¡Answer£º B £¨P161£©
¡¡¡¡7. The tone of literature in "Song of Experience" by William¡¡Blake is _______.
¡¡¡¡A.doleful
¡¡¡¡B.lively
¡¡¡¡C.plain
¡¡¡¡D.utter
¡¡¡¡Answer£º A £¨doleful£º ±¯°§µÄP168-169£©
¡¡¡¡8. _____is regarded as a "worship of nature".
¡¡¡¡A.John Keats
¡¡¡¡B.William Blake
¡¡¡¡C.William Wordsworth
¡¡¡¡D.Jane Austen
¡¡¡¡Answer£º C £¨P176£©
¡¡¡¡9. Which of the following writings is not created by William¡¡Wordsworth£¿
¡¡¡¡A.I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud.
¡¡¡¡B.Composed upon Westminster Bridge£¬ September 3£¬ 1802.
¡¡¡¡C.The Solitary Reaper.
¡¡¡¡D.The Chimney Sweeper.
¡¡¡¡Answer£º D £¨P179¡ª¡ª182£©
¡¡¡¡10. Wordsworth's short poems can be classified into two groups£º¡¡poems about nature and poems about________.
¡¡¡¡A.love
¡¡¡¡B.human life
¡¡¡¡C.freedom
¡¡¡¡D.social activities
¡¡¡¡Answer£º B £¨P176£©
¡¡¡¡11. "Don Juan" is Byron's masterpiece£¬ a great ______of the¡¡early 19th century.
¡¡¡¡A.comedy
¡¡¡¡B.tragedy
¡¡¡¡C.comic epic
¡¡¡¡D.novel
¡¡¡¡Answer£º C £¨P194£©
¡¡¡¡12. In his lyrics such as "Ode to Liberty"£¬ "Ode to Naples"£¬¡¡Percy Bysshe Shelly expressed his love for_____ and his hatred¡¡toward tyranny.
¡¡¡¡A.the middle class
¡¡¡¡B.the poor
¡¡¡¡C.freedom
¡¡¡¡D.the proletariat
¡¡¡¡Answer£º C £¨P207£©
¡¡¡¡13. "Wild Spirit£¬ which art moving everywhere£» / Destroy and¡¡Preserver£» hear£¬ O hear£¡" The two lines are found in_____.
¡¡¡¡A.Young Goodman Brown by Hawthorne
¡¡¡¡B.Ode to the West Wind by Shelly
¡¡¡¡C.Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman
¡¡¡¡D.Ulysses by Joyce
¡¡¡¡Answer£º B £¨P212£©
¡¡¡¡14. In Shelly's "To a Skylark"£¬ the bird£¬ suspended between¡¡reality and poetic image£¬ pours forth an exultant song¡¡which suggests to the poet________.
¡¡¡¡A.both celestial rapture and human limitation
¡¡¡¡B.both image creation and profound meaning
¡¡¡¡C.both music and words
¡¡¡¡D.both inspiration and skills of writing
¡¡¡¡Answer£º A £¨P206£©
¡¡¡¡15. The author of "Ode on a Grecian Urn" is __________.
¡¡¡¡A.Wordsworth
¡¡¡¡B.Austen
¡¡¡¡C.Byron
¡¡¡¡D.Keats
¡¡¡¡Answer£º D £¨217£©
¡¡¡¡16. Jane Austen's first novel is __________.
¡¡¡¡A.Pride and Prejudice
¡¡¡¡B.Sense and Sensibility
¡¡¡¡C.Emma
¡¡¡¡D.Plan of a Novel
¡¡¡¡Answer£º B £¨P222£©
¡¡¡¡17. In terms of Pride and Prejudice£¬ which is not true£¿
¡¡¡¡A.Pride and Prejudice is the most popular of Jane Austen's¡¡novels.
¡¡¡¡B.Pride and Prejudice is originally drafted as "First¡¡Impressions".
¡¡¡¡C.Pride and Prejudice is a tragic novel.
¡¡¡¡D.In this novel£¬ the author explores the relationship between¡¡great love and realistic benefits.
¡¡¡¡Answer£º C £¨P223-225£©
¡¡¡¡18. After reading the first chapter of Pride and Prejudice£¬¡¡we may come to know that Mrs.Bennet is a woman of_______.
¡¡¡¡A.simple character and poor understanding
¡¡¡¡B.simple character and quick wit
¡¡¡¡C.intricate character and quick wit
¡¡¡¡D.intricate character and poor understanding
¡¡¡¡Answer£º A £¨P227£©
¡¡¡¡19. Romanticism is a period of British literature roughly dated¡¡from _________.
¡¡¡¡A.1660¡ª¡ª1798
¡¡¡¡B.1798¡ª¡ª1832
¡¡¡¡C.1483¡ª¡ª1546
¡¡¡¡D.1836¡ª¡ª1901
¡¡¡¡Answer£º B £¨P157£©
¡¡¡¡20. Which of the following is the Gothic novel£¿
¡¡¡¡A.Shelly's Prometheus Unbound
¡¡¡¡B.Keats' Lamia
¡¡¡¡C.Mary Shelly's Frankenstein
¡¡¡¡D.Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice
¡¡¡¡Answer£º C £¨P166£©
¡¡¡¡21.The lines "It was a miracle of rare device£¬/ A sunny pleasure dome with caves of ice" are found in__________.
¡¡¡¡A.Samuel Taylor Coleridge's "Kubla Khan"
¡¡¡¡B.William Wordsworth's Lines Written in Early Spring"
¡¡¡¡C.John Keats's "Ode to Autumn"
¡¡¡¡D.Percy Bysshe Shelly's "Ode to the West Wind"
¡¡¡¡Answer£º A £¨P190¡ª¡ª191£©
¡¡¡¡22. Which of the following is taken from John Keats' "Ode on a¡¡Grecial Urn"£¿
¡¡¡¡A."I fall upon the thorns of life£¡ I bleed£¡"
¡¡¡¡B."They are both gone up to the church to pray.'
¡¡¡¡C."Earth has not anything to show more fair."
¡¡¡¡D."Beauty is truth£¬ truth beauty".
¡¡¡¡Answer£º D £¨P221£©
¡¡¡¡II. Read the quoted part and answer the questions£º
¡¡¡¡1. "A little black thing among the snow
¡¡¡¡Crying "'weep£¡ 'weep£¡ In notes of woe
¡¡¡¡"where are thy father & mother£¿ Say£¿ "
¡¡¡¡"They are both gone up to the church to prey."
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©Identify the poem and poet.
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©Explain "notes of woe".
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©What does the sentence mean "they ate both gone up to the¡¡church to prey."
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©It is from "The Chimney Sweeper £¨from songs of¡¡experience£© by Blake.£¨P172£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©"notes of woe" means the songs/notes of sadness.
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©It implies£º religion is the instrument of their repression/oppression£¬ its nature is to help bring misery to the poor children.£¨P169£©
¡¡¡¡2. "The isles of Greece£¬ the isles of Greece£¡
¡¡¡¡Where burning Sappho loved and sung£¬
¡¡¡¡Where grew the arts of war and peace£¬
¡¡¡¡Where Delos rose£¬ and Phoebus sprung£¡
¡¡¡¡Eternal summer gilds them all£¬
¡¡¡¡But all£¬ except their sun£¬ is set."
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©Identify the poem and its author£»
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©What does it mean "But all£¬ except their sun£¬ is set."
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©What does the passage imply£¿
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©The poet is Byron. The poem is taken from "The Isles of¡¡Greece £¨from Don Juan£©" £¨P199£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©The sentence means£º The sun is still on the rise£¬ but the¡¡rest things all set.
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©The passage implied£º The author lamented over the fallen Greece£º¡¡In the past£¬ Greece nurtured/ cultivated great poets and¡¡heroes£¬who enjoyed freedom and civilization£¬ but now Greece had¡¡been enslaved£¬the past honorable history couldn't be found
¡¡¡¡again. £¨P199£©
¡¡¡¡3. "With plough and spade and hoe and loom¡¡Trace your grave and build your tomb¡¡And weave your winding-sheet¡ª¡ªtill fair¡¡England be your Sepulcher"
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©Explain "sepulcher"
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©What was the deep implication of the poem£¿
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©Sepulcher means grave. £¨P210~211£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©The poem ironically addressed to the workers who submit to¡¡capitalist exploitation. It warned them£º If they gave up the¡¡struggle£¬ they would be digging graves for themselves wish¡¡their own hands. £¨P211£©
¡¡¡¡4. "Thou still unravish'd bride of quietness£¬
¡¡¡¡Thou foster-child of silence and slow time£¬
¡¡¡¡Sylvan historian£¬ who canst thus express
¡¡¡¡A flowery tale more sweetly than our rhyme£º"
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©Who is the poet£¿ The name£¿
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©Explain the sentence.
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©What was the theme of the poem£¿
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©This is the "ode on a Grecian Um"£¬ which was written by the¡¡poet¡ª¡ªJohn Keats. £¨P219£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©The sentence means£º though time has passed£¬ the urn £¬¡¡the works of the art still remains£¬ and it tells a¡¡pastoral/lyrical tale to us£¬ and the description of the urn is¡¡much more beautiful than the words of any human. £¨P218£©
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©The theme is£º Human life is transient£¬ but the art is¡¡immortal. £¨P218£©
¡¡¡¡5. "Place me on Sunium's marbles steep£¬
¡¡¡¡Where nothing£¬ save the waves and I£¬
¡¡¡¡May her our mutual murmurs sweep£»
¡¡¡¡There£¬ swan like£¬ let me sing and die£º
¡¡¡¡A land of slaves shall ne'er be mine¡ª¡ª
¡¡¡¡Dash down you cup of Samian wine£¡"
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©Identify the poem and its author. £¨P203£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©Explain "swan like£¬ let me sing and die" £¨P199£©
¡¡¡¡Interpret the passage and spot its implication.
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©The poet is Byron. The poem is taken from "The Isles of¡¡Greece £¨from Don Juan£©" £¨P203£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©Swan is famous for its faith to its lover£¬ one of them die£¬¡¡the other will refuse to eat and drink£¬ it will cry till death.¡¡Here the author used a simile to show his strong desire to¡¡fight with the invaders till death£¬ and appeal to the¡¡suppressed Greek people to struggle for their freedom and¡¡liberation.
¡¡¡¡6. "For oft£¬ when on my couch I lie¡¡In vacant or in pensive mood£¬¡¡They flash upon that inward eye¡¡Which is the bliss of solitude£»¡¡And then my heart with pleasure fills£¬¡¡And dance with the daffodils."
¡¡¡¡£¨1£© What is the "bliss of the solitude"£¿
¡¡¡¡£¨2£© Interpret the passage.
¡¡¡¡£¨3£© Why did the poet write the poem£¬ what did he want to
¡¡¡¡express£¿
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©The Daffodils the poem saw. £¨P180£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©It is a bliss/happiness to recollect the beauty of nature in
¡¡¡¡his mind when he is solitude/lonely.
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©The poem depicts/deals with the flowers that he came across¡¡along waterside£¬ by which he expresses the quiet£¬ sympathy£¬¡¡loving feeling to nature just like his words "poetry is from¡¡"emotion recollected in tranquility".
¡¡¡¡7. "Then naked & white£¬ all their bags left behind£¬¡¡They rise upon clouds£¬ and sport in the wind£¬¡¡And the angle told Tom£¬ if he'd be a good bye£¬¡¡He'd have God for his father£¬ and never want joy."
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©Identify the poem and its poet£»
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©What does the poem implies£¿
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£© The poem is take from "The Chimney Sweeper £¨from Songs of¡¡Innocence£©"£¬ which was written by William Blake.£¨p171£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£© This is a lovely poem presenting a happy and innocent¡¡world£¬ though the wretched child are exploited and orphaned£¬¡¡they had nice dream for life and the world£¬ which implies¡¡religion make people obedient to exploitation£¬ and from¡¡religion£¬ they can get consolation and an "illusory¡¡happiness".£¨p168£©
¡¡¡¡8. "As thus with thee in prayer in my sore need.
¡¡¡¡Oh£¡ Lift me as a wave£¬ a leaf£¬ a cloud£¡
¡¡¡¡I fall upon the thorns of life£¡ I bleed£¡¡¡A heavy weight of hours has chained and bowed¡¡One too like thee£º tameless£¬ and swift and proud."
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©Explain "I fall upon the thorns of life£¬ I bleed" £¨P208£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©Can you comprehend the deep emotion contained in the poem£¿
¡¡¡¡What's that£¿
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©The poet was called the "the heart of all hearts"£¬¡¡he trumpeted the radical prophecy of hope and rebirth.¡¡Please write out his classic words.
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©The sentence call Shelley's desire that he couldn't best¡¡being fettered to/limited by the humdrum/too ordinary reality¡¡of everyday£¡ £¨P208£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©In the poem£¬ the west wind has become the poet himself£¬¡¡he wants to be free£¬ proud and controllable like the wild west wind£¬to destruct and construct with the strong power like the¡¡west wind. £¨P207~208£©
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©"If Winter comes£¬ can Spring be far behind£¿" £¨P208£©
¡¡¡¡9. "O Attic shape£¡ Fair attitude£¡ With brede
¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡
¡¡¡¡As doth eternity£º cold pastoral£¡"
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©How do you understand "cold pastoral"
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©What device is used in the poem£¿
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©Explain the implication of the poem.
¡¡¡¡At the end of the poem£¬ the poet gave a famous saying£¬¡¡and it is also the theme of the poem£¬ what is that£¿
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©Cold pastoral means the lyrical scene on the Grecian urn¡¡lacks life and warmth. £¨P222£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©Contrast. £¨P218£©
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©The poet wanted to show the permanence of the art and the transience of human passion presenting his ambivalence/opposing feelings about time and nature of beauty.
¡¡¡¡The saying is "Beauty is truth£¬ truth beauty" £¨P218~219£©
¡¡¡¡10. "Where fore feed and Clothe and save
¡¡¡¡From the cradle to the grave
¡¡¡¡Drain your sweat¡ª¡ªnay£¬ drink your blood£¿"
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©Who wrote the poem£¿ What's its name£¿
¡¡¡¡£¨2£© Explain "drones"£¬
¡¡¡¡£¨3£© Interpret the passage.
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©The poem is "A song£º Men of England" by Shelley. £¨P209£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©Drones the male of the honey-bees that don't work £¬¡¡referring to the parasitic class in human society.
¡¡¡¡£¨drones and bees are the devices of metaphor£© £¨P210£©
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©The poet called all working people to rise up against their¡¡political oppressors£¬ but point out the intolerable injustice¡¡of economic exploitation. It expressed the love for freedom and¡¡the hatred to tyranny of the author. £¨P207£©
¡¡¡¡11. "Wild spirit£¬ which art moving everywhere£»
¡¡¡¡Destroyer and Preserver£» hear£¬ O hear£¡"
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©What does the "wild spirit "refer to£¿
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©Why called it "Destroyer and Preserver" at the same time£¿
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©Identify the poet and the poem.
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©"wild spirit" refers to west wind/autumn wind. £¨P212£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©Because west wind buried the dead year and year and prepared¡¡for a new spring£¬ the poet call it "Destroyer and preserver".
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©It is "Ode to the west wind" of Shelley. £¨terza rima£©
¡¡¡¡III. Questions and answers£º
¡¡¡¡1.Please list the subjects and the faculties of the
¡¡¡¡Romanticism.
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£© The subjects are£º love£¬ nature£¬ nationalism£¬ individualism£¬
¡¡¡¡£¨2£© The faculties they cherished are£º imagination£¬ spontaneity£¬¡¡inspiration. £¨P162£©
¡¡¡¡2.William Wordsworth was the first representative author of¡¡Rom£¬How do you know his idea and style£¿
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©His poems are most about Nature and Human Life£»
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©Beyond the pleasure of the picturesque with the eye and the¡¡external aspects of nature£¬ however£¬ lies in deeper moral¡¡awareness£¬ a sense of completeness in multiplicity.
¡¡¡¡£¨it means poem not only deals with the beautiful world£¬ but¡¡express moral£©
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©Common life and the joy and sorrow of the common people and¡¡inner self are his subjects£»
¡¡¡¡£¨4£©He is a poet in memory of the past and was called "prophets¡¡of nature"£»
¡¡¡¡£¨5£©He deliberately writes in simple and ordinary speech £¬¡¡refuses to decorate the truth of experience of pure and¡¡profound feeling£»
¡¡¡¡£¨6£©He thought poet is "a man speaking to men£¬" poetry is "the¡¡spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings£¬ which originates in¡¡emotion recollected in tranquility."
¡¡¡¡£¨7£©He always writes an elusive beauty of simplicity or a rural¡¡figure. £¨P176-179£©
¡¡¡¡3.What thoughts and event influenced the period of Romanticism£¿
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£© Rousseau £¨a French philosopher£© explored new ideas about¡¡nature£¬ society and education£¬ which provided guiding priding¡¡principles for the French Revolution and Romanticism£»
¡¡¡¡£¨2£© The French Revolution and "the Declaration of Rights of
¡¡¡¡Man"£¨written by Thomas Paine£©aroused the great sympathy and¡¡enthusiasm in the English liberals and radicals£¬which became a¡¡great source for Romanticism.
¡¡¡¡£¨3£© England itself had experienced profound economic and social¡¡changes as industrialism£¬which were reflected in the works of¡¡literature. £¨P157-159£©
¡¡¡¡4.Byron's greatest contribution is his creation of the "Byronic¡¡hero" What kind of the hero he is£¿ Give comment on him.
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£© "Don Juan" is Byron's masterpiece£¬ a great comic epic£¬¡¡in which Byron described a hero named Don Juan.¡¡He was a great lover and seducer of women.¡¡In the conventional sense£¬al positives like courage£¬¡¡generosity£¬ and frankness¡
¡¡¡¡In a word£¬ Don was proud Juan was immoral£¬¡¡but Juan had his own mor£¬ mysterious£¬ and a noble rebel¡¡figure.
¡¡¡¡He was a young man with unconquerable wills and¡¡inexhaustible energies£¬¡¡one of rebellious individuals against outworn/outdated¡¡social systems and conventions.
¡¡¡¡£¨2£© Comment£º The poet's true intention is to present a¡¡panoramic view of different types of society£¬the main theme of¡¡the works the basic ironic theme of appearance and¡¡reality£¬during which the poet also presented various materials¡¡and the clash of emotions. £¨P194-196£©
¡¡¡¡5. What is the difference between Romanticism and¡¡Neoclassicism£¿
¡¡¡¡£¨Neoclassicism=Augustans=enlightener£©
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©The Romantic Movement expressed negative attitude toward the¡¡existing social and political condition£¬ the Romantics saw the¡¡corruption and injustice of the¡¡inhumanity of capitalism£»
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©The Neo saw man as a social£» while Rom saw him as an¡¡individual in the solitary state£»
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©Neo stressed the common features of men£» but the Rom¡¡stressed the special qualities of each individual's mind£»
¡¡¡¡£¨4£©Neo celebrated rationality£¬ equality and science of the¡¡outside world£» while Rom changed to the inner world of the¡¡human spirit£¬ whose theory saw the individual as the center of¡¡all experience£»
¡¡¡¡£¨5£©Literature was heavily didactic and moralizing. There were¡¡fixed laws for each type of literature£» Rom expressed his¡¡feeling£¬ valued accuracy in portraying£¬ they thought literature¡¡should be free from all rules.
¡¡¡¡£¨6£©The most important form in Neo was prose£» while Rom was an¡¡age of poetry. £¨P160-161£©
¡¡¡¡6.Analyze the characters of John Keats's poetry.
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©The poems are sensuous£¬ colorful£¬ and rich in imagery£¬¡¡£¨which expresses the acuteness of his senses£©
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©Words are beautiful and musical.
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©The ancient Greek and English poetry provides the most¡¡important imaginative resource.
¡¡¡¡£¨4£©The construction of poems are knit£¬ and the description go¡¡beyond the physical beauty of the world. £¨P218-219£©
¡¡¡¡7. Jane Austen was the only important female author in the
¡¡¡¡18-19th century£¬ how do you know about her£¿
¡¡¡¡Answer£º
¡¡¡¡Generally speaking£¬ Austen was writer of the 18th century.
¡¡¡¡£¨1£©Her novels always dealt with the romantic entanglement of¡¡the heroines£»
¡¡¡¡£¨2£©She believed in it that reason over passion£¬ sense of¡¡responsibility£¬ good manners£¬¡¡and clear judgment over romance£» she honored the Augustan¡¡virtues of moderation£¬¡¡dignity disciplined emotion and common sense£»
¡¡¡¡£¨3£©She contempt snobbery£¬ stupidity£¬ worldliness etc£»
¡¡¡¡£¨4£©Her main concern was the relationship between men and women¡¡in love£»
¡¡¡¡£¨5£©Her writing range was limited£¬ all restricted to the¡¡provincial life of the 18th century England£»
¡¡¡¡£¨6£©She presented the quiet£¬ day-to-day country life of the¡¡middle -upper -class English.
¡¡¡¡£¨7£©Her characteristic theme was£º maturity is got by the loss of illusions. £¨P223¡ª¡ª226£©