10.02 Can You Hear Me Now? Quiz
Question 1
Read The Wages of Sin literary analysis. Match each example from the essay with the part of the literary analysis that the example fulfills.
A.
Trust is like a mirror; once it has been shattered, nothing ever looks quite the same.
B.
In “Rappaccini’s Daughter,” Hawthorne portrays the effects of betrayal of trust in order to demonstrate that all in this world is untrustworthy and death is the only certainty as prescribed in penalty for man’s betrayal of God.
C.
Perhaps the deeper cause of the tragedy lies in fact that neither Giovanni nor Rappaccini love or trust Beatrice more than his ideology.
D.
As she dies from the antidote, she charges Giovanni with her death saying, “Farewell, Giovanni. Thy words of hatred are like lead within my heart…Oh, was there from the first not more poison in thy nature than in mine?” (420)
E.
So Giovanni, like Rappaccini, is betrayed by this illusive faith in an intellectual human construct.
F.
This story goes beyond mere tragedy, however.
G.
Rappaccini is confronted with his treachery by Beatrice in her dying moments when she asks,
H.
Still, wages of betrayal are more heinous than life.
I.
She turns from the poison with which her father nourished and sustained her and accepts the antidote which Giovanni, her lover offers her.
J.
(399)
30 points
Question 2
Select all of the following that could serve as a hook for the introduction of a literary analysis.
4 points
Question 3
The conclusion is arguably the hardest paragraph of an analysis to write. Select all of the following that may be used to make a conclusion memorable rather than redundant.
3 points
Question 4
Select all of the following that are essential to an effective introduction to a literary analysis.
A memorable clincher
The author and title of the work
A description of the setting
A thesis statement about the theme
A very brief summary of the text