Quizzes at Fun Trivia Fun Trivia | quizzes Quizzes | games Games | community People | services Services | help Help | me Me
New Player - Log In
Currently 9417 players online.   Trivia games, quizzes, and contests - FREE !     Get Started! quiz register

The Romantic Period: Authors and Poets

Created by skylarb

Fun Trivia : Quizzes : Literature Before 1900
The Romantic Period Authors and Poets game quiz
"Process of elimination is the key to this quiz. Each author is the answer to only one question. Two additional questions ask you to name works."

15 Points Per Correct Answer - No time limit  



1. Though an icon of the Romantic period, his works are in some ways the least romantic of the group. He favored traditional forms over new innovations; he preferred satire to introspection; and in “English Bards and Scotch Reviewers,” he ridiculed his fellow Romantics as being inferior to the neoclassical poets.
    John Keats
    William Wordsworth
    Lord Byron
    Samuel Taylor Coleridge


2. Though she wrote during the Romantic period, she is usually classified as a “Regency” writer. Her works do not generally exhibit the viewpoint of the Romantics; indeed, she has even been called anti-romantic, because she seemed to value sense more than sensibility.
    Mary Shelley
    Jane Austen
    Charlotte Bronte
    Mary Lamb


3. This author perfected the historical novel, but s/he always wanted to be known as a poet.
    Jane Austen
    Charles Lamb
    Sir Walter Scott
    Mary Shelley


4. This forerunner of the Romantics regard himself as something of a prophet; he created his own mythology, which is expressed in such works as “Jerusalem” and “The Four Zoas.”
    Robert Burns
    Dante Rossetti
    John Milton
    William Blake


5. This early or pre-Romantic writer is best known for his Scottish songs.
    Sir Walter Scott
    William Blake
    Samuel Taylor Coleridge
    Robert Burns


6. We know him best as a writer of supernatural poetry; but in his own day, he was better known for his religious prose.
    John Keats
    William Wordsworth
    Samuel Taylor Coleridge
    Lord Byron


7. Robert Browning criticized this Romantic for abandoning his ideals and becoming conservative, all so that he might, in Browning’s opinion, receive “a riband to stick in his coat.”
    Samuel Taylor Coleridge
    William Wordsworth
    Sir Walter Scott
    Percy Bysshe Shelley


8. This romantic writer used “Elia” for a pseudonym. He was unusual among the Romantics in his preference for the city over the country.
    William Blake
    Charles Lamb
    William Wordsworth
    Samuel Taylor Coleridge


9. He died of tuberculosis at the age of 26, but not before leaving an impressive body of poems, including “To Autumn” and “Ode on Melancholy.”
    Percy Bysshe Shelley
    Samuel Taylor Coleridge
    John Keats
    Lord Byron


10. She was a proponent of a woman’s right to be educated. Her daughter must have received a suitable education, because she wrote “Frankenstein.”
    Mary Shelley
    Mary Byron
    Mary Lamb
    Mary Wollstonecraft


11. This author of “To a Skylark” died by drowning.
    Mary Lamb
    John Keats
    Percy Bysshe Shelley
    Lord Byron


12. Technically, he wrote during the Victorian period, but his work is considered to be a product of “American Romanticism.” He himself was once an idealist who spent time in a Utopian commune. He lost hope in the power of social reformation, however, and his “Blithedale Romance” depicts a character so intent on reforming humanity, that he does not seem to care for individual men and women.
    Nathaniel Hawthorne
    Herman Melville
    Edgar Allen Poe
    Washington Irving


13. This American Romantic once said, “I stand for the heart. To the dogs with the head!”
    Nathaniel Hawthorne
    Washington Irving
    Edgar Allen Poe
    Herman Melville


14. Byron wrote: “And the might of the Gentile, unsmote by the sword, / Hath melted like snow in the glance of the Lord!” In what poem did these lines appear?
    Song of Saul Before His Last Battle
    On the Day of the Destruction of Jerusalem By Titus
    The Destruction of Sennacherib
    Herod’s Lament for Mariamne


15. This foundational work of the Romantic Period was published by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
    English Bards and Scotch Reviewers
    The Heart of Midlothian
    The Lyrical Ballads
    The Rime of the Ancient Mariner


Copyright, FunTrivia.com. All Rights Reserved.
Legal / Conditions of Use