For Anne Gregory (Poem) - Quiz
[कक्षा 10th - अचूक बैच - For Anne Gregory - MERIT YARD]
Question 1 / 35Who is the poet of the poem 'For Anne Gregory'?
A) Robert Frost
B) Walt Whitman
C) W.B. Yeats
D) Carl Sandburg
Question 2 / 35Who is the poet talking to?
A) A child
B) His mother
C) A young lady named Anne Gregory
D) His wife
Question 3 / 35What is the color of Anne's hair?
A) Black
B) Yellow (Honey-coloured)
C) Red
D) Brown
Question 4 / 35Why does the young man love Anne?
A) For her intelligence
B) For her money
C) For her yellow hair (External beauty)
D) For her nature
Question 5 / 35What does the phrase 'Ramparts at your ear' refer to?
A) A fort wall
B) Earrings
C) The locks of her hair falling over her ears
D) A scarf
Question 6 / 35What kind of love does Anne desire?
A) Temporary
B) To be loved for 'herself alone' (Internal beauty)
C) Wealthy love
D) Love for her hair
Question 7 / 35What can Anne do to her hair?
A) Cut it
B) Dye it
C) Hide it
D) Sell it
Question 8 / 35Which colours does she mention for hair dye?
A) Red, Blue, Green
B) Brown, Black, or Carrot
C) Pink, Purple, White
D) Silver, Gold, Bronze
Question 9 / 35Why does she want to change her hair color?
A) To look ugly
B) To be fashionable
C) So men love her for herself, not her yellow hair
D) She hates yellow
Question 10 / 35Who told the poet about the text?
A) An old religious man
B) An old religious man
C) His teacher
D) Anne's father
Question 11 / 35What did the religious man find?
A) A treasure
B) A text (scripture) to prove his point
C) A map
D) A ring
Question 12 / 35According to the text, who can love Anne for 'herself alone'?
A) Her mother
B) The poet
C) Only God
D) No one
Question 13 / 35Why can humans not love for 'herself alone'?
A) They are selfish
B) They are attracted by physical/external beauty
C) They are blind
D) They are busy
Question 14 / 35The word 'Despair' means:
A) Happiness
B) Hope
C) Hopelessness / Sadness
D) Anger
Question 15 / 35Why is the young man 'thrown into despair'?
A) Anne rejected him
B) Because of her great beauty (honey-coloured hair)
C) He lost his money
D) He is sick
Question 16 / 35"Honey-coloured ramparts at your ear". Which poetic device?
A) Simile
B) Metaphor
C) Alliteration
D) Repetition
Question 17 / 35The poem is a conversation between:
A) Two lovers
B) The poet (speaker) and Anne Gregory
C) Anne and God
D) Anne and her father
Question 18 / 35What is the central theme of the poem?
A) Hair care
B) Religion
C) Inner beauty vs Outer appearance
D) Friendship
Question 19 / 35Who proves that physical beauty is not everything?
A) The poet
B) The religious man's text (God)
C) Anne
D) The young man
Question 20 / 35"Set such colour there". Where is 'there'?
A) On the wall
B) In the sky
C) On her hair
D) On her dress
Question 21 / 35The word 'Yesternight' means:
A) Tomorrow night
B) Today night
C) Yesterday night (Last night)
D) A long time ago
Question 22 / 35Is Anne happy that men love her for her yellow hair?
A) Yes, very happy
B) No, she wants to be loved for her inner self
C) She doesn't care
D) She is proud
Question 23 / 35"But I can get a hair-dye". Who says this?
A) The poet
B) Anne Gregory
C) The religious man
D) The young man
Question 24 / 35"That he had found a text to prove". Who is 'he'?
A) The poet
B) God
C) The old religious man
D) Anne's lover
Question 25 / 35God loves us for:
A) Our clothes
B) Our looks
C) Ourselves alone (Inner soul)
D) Our money
Question 26 / 35What does 'Carrot' refer to in the poem?
A) A vegetable
B) Orange/Red hair colour
C) Food
D) A pet
Question 27 / 35The tone of the poet is:
A) Angry
B) Funny
C) Serious and Philosophical
D) Sad
Question 28 / 35"Your yellow hair" suggests Anne is:
A) Old
B) Blonde and beautiful
C) Bald
D) Wearing a wig
Question 29 / 35"Love me for myself alone". What does this imply?
A) Love my money
B) Love my face
C) Love my character and soul, not appearance
D) Love my family
Question 30 / 35W.B. Yeats was an ______ poet.
A) American
B) Indian
C) Irish
D) Australian
Question 31 / 35The rhyming scheme of the poem is:
A) abab
B) abcbdb
C) aabbcc
D) abcd
Question 32 / 35"Set such colour there". Who sets the colour?
A) The poet
B) God
C) Anne herself (by dyeing)
D) The religious man
Question 33 / 35What does 'Ramparts' metaphorically represent?
A) Protection
B) A barrier preventing access to her inner self
C) A house
D) A river
Question 34 / 35Does the poet believe men can easily love for inner beauty?
A) Yes
B) No, it's very difficult for humans
C) Maybe
D) He doesn't know
Question 35 / 35The poem ends with the idea that divine love is:
A) Impossible
B) Weak
C) Superior and pure
D) Conditional