[कक्षा 10th - अचूक बैच - For Anne Gregory - MERIT YARD]
Question 1 / 35Who is the poet of the poem 'For Anne Gregory'?
Question 2 / 35Who is the poet talking to?
Question 3 / 35What is the color of Anne's hair?
Question 4 / 35Why does the young man love Anne?
Question 5 / 35What does the phrase 'Ramparts at your ear' refer to?
Question 6 / 35What kind of love does Anne desire?
Question 7 / 35What can Anne do to her hair?
Question 8 / 35Which colours does she mention for hair dye?
Question 9 / 35Why does she want to change her hair color?
Question 10 / 35Who told the poet about the text?
Question 11 / 35What did the religious man find?
Question 12 / 35According to the text, who can love Anne for 'herself alone'?
Question 13 / 35Why can humans not love for 'herself alone'?
Question 14 / 35The word 'Despair' means:
Question 15 / 35Why is the young man 'thrown into despair'?
Question 16 / 35"Honey-coloured ramparts at your ear". Which poetic device?
Question 17 / 35The poem is a conversation between:
Question 18 / 35What is the central theme of the poem?
Question 19 / 35Who proves that physical beauty is not everything?
Question 20 / 35"Set such colour there". Where is 'there'?
Question 21 / 35The word 'Yesternight' means:
Question 22 / 35Is Anne happy that men love her for her yellow hair?
Question 23 / 35"But I can get a hair-dye". Who says this?
Question 24 / 35"That he had found a text to prove". Who is 'he'?
Question 25 / 35God loves us for:
Question 26 / 35What does 'Carrot' refer to in the poem?
Question 27 / 35The tone of the poet is:
Question 28 / 35"Your yellow hair" suggests Anne is:
Question 29 / 35"Love me for myself alone". What does this imply?
Question 30 / 35W.B. Yeats was an ______ poet.
Question 31 / 35The rhyming scheme of the poem is:
Question 32 / 35"Set such colour there". Who sets the colour?
Question 33 / 35What does 'Ramparts' metaphorically represent?
Question 34 / 35Does the poet believe men can easily love for inner beauty?
Question 35 / 35The poem ends with the idea that divine love is: