Set-II
11. "The Sick Rose" represents a fall from the state of -
(a) innovation (b) purity (c) innocence (d) experience
(c) innocence
12. To the 'rose' the 'worm' is -
(a) visible (b) notable (c) invisible (d) audible
(c) invisible
13. 'The howling storm' empowers the -
(a) rose (b) nature (c) night (d) worm
(d) worm
14. "The Sick Rose" is a/an -
(a) sonnet (b) elegy (c) lyric (d) blank verse
(c) lyric
15. The night when the worm comes to destroy the rose is -
(a) tranquil (b) stormy (c) rainy (d) chilly
(b) stormy
16. The rose seems to be sick -
(a) before the dark secret love (b) before she meets the invisible worm (c) after she encountered the howling night (d) after she had made dark secret love
(d) after she had made dark secret love
17. The worm took shelter in the rose to -
(a) make it brighter (b) woo its property (c) collect honey (d) make a prey of his passionate love
(d) make a prey of his passionate love
18. Blake uses the words 'thou' and 'thy' to mean respectively -
(a) yours and you (b) you and yourself (c) your and you (d) you and your
(d) you and your
19. 'Crimson' means -
(a) pink colour (b) yellow colour (c) white colour (d) red colour
(d) red colour
20. 'O Rose thou art sick'- Here 'rose' is a symbol of -
(a) love (b) sickness (c) craziness (d) rejection
(a) love