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৪৯তম বিসিএস ⎯ ইংরেজি [১২১]

পরীক্ষা৪৯তম বিসিএস ⎯ ইংরেজি [১২১]তারিখতারিখ অনির্ধারিতসময়25 minutes
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Exam - 7 Samuel Taylor Coleridge – The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Kubla Khan, Dejection: An Ode [Source: Class - 5 and Relevant Books]
ঘনত্ব
উত্তর
উত্তরিতবর্তমানপুনরায় দেখুনঅসম্পূর্ণ

৪৯তম বিসিএস ⎯ ইংরেজি [১২১]

৪৯তম বিসিএস ⎯ ইংরেজি [১২১] · তারিখ অনির্ধারিত · ৫০ প্রশ্ন

.
Which of the following is considered a core characteristic of Romanticism, strongly evident in Coleridge's works?
  1. Emphasis on rationalism and Enlightenment philosophy.
  2. Valuing urban life and industrial progress.
  3. A focus on emotion, imagination, and the sublime in nature.
  4. Strict adherence to classical poetic forms and meters.
সঠিক উত্তর:
A focus on emotion, imagination, and the sublime in nature.
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
A focus on emotion, imagination, and the sublime in nature.
ব্যাখ্যা

- Romanticism was an artistic, literary, musical, and intellectual movement that originated in Europe toward the end of the 18th century. It was characterized by its emphasis on emotion and individualism as well as glorification of all the past and nature, preferring the medieval rather than the classical.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was a prominent figure in the English Romantic movement. His works, such as "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" and "Kubla Khan," are prime examples of these Romantic ideals.

- Emotion and Imagination: Coleridge's poetry delves deeply into psychological states, dreams, and the power of the human mind to create and perceive. "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," for instance, explores themes of guilt, suffering, and redemption through vivid imagery born of imagination.
The Sublime in Nature: Romantics saw nature not just as a backdrop, but as a powerful, awe-inspiring force that could evoke profound emotional and spiritual experiences. Coleridge often depicts nature as mysterious, grand, and capable of both terrifying and elevating the human spirit.
Supernatural Elements: Closely linked to imagination, Coleridge frequently incorporated supernatural elements and the fantastical into his works, further distinguishing them from the rationalism of the Enlightenment.

.
Which of Coleridge's famous poems is a prime example of his exploration of the exotic, the supernatural, and the psychological depths of guilt and penance within a dream-like, imaginative landscape?
  1. Tintern Abbey
  2. Ode to a Nightingale
  3. Kubla Khan
  4. Lines Written in Early Spring
সঠিক উত্তর:
Kubla Khan
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Kubla Khan
ব্যাখ্যা

- "Kubla Khan" (more formally titled "Kubla Khan; or, A Vision in a Dream: A Fragment") is the quintessential example of Coleridge's exploration of these themes.

- Exotic: The poem is set in a fantastical, exotic landscape inspired by Xanadu, the summer palace of the Mongol emperor Kublai Khan, featuring "Alph, the sacred river," "caverns measureless to man," and "gardens bright with sinuous rills."
Supernatural: The entire poem is presented as a vision or dream, giving it an otherworldly and supernatural quality. The figure of the "damsel with a dulcimer" and the speaker's desire to build the "dome in air" are mystical elements.
Psychological Depths of Guilt and Penance: While "Kubla Khan" is more about the creative process and the power of imagination, it shares the dream-like, often unsettling atmosphere that Coleridge used to explore deeper psychological states in other works. However, it's important to note that "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" is a much stronger example of guilt and penance. Given the options, "Kubla Khan" best fits the "exotic, supernatural, and dream-like, imaginative landscape" part of the question.

.
Coleridge's concept of "suspension of disbelief," crucial for appreciating fantastical literature, is most closely associated with the acceptance of:
  1. Realistic character development.
  2. Plausible scientific explanations.
  3. Incredible or supernatural elements as temporarily real within a story.
  4. Historical accuracy in settings.
সঠিক উত্তর:
Incredible or supernatural elements as temporarily real within a story.
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Incredible or supernatural elements as temporarily real within a story.
ব্যাখ্যা

- Meaning of Suspension of Disbelief
It is the temporary acceptance of implausible or impossible elements in a story.
Readers willingly “suspend” their skepticism to immerse themselves in the narrative.
This allows the poet or author to explore imaginative or supernatural themes while still evoking emotional responses.

- Application in Literature
In fantasy, Gothic, or supernatural tales, readers encounter elements like ghosts, magic, or mythical creatures.
According to Coleridge, these elements do not need to be realistic, but they must be presented consistently and with internal logic.
For example: In The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, the supernatural events (e.g., albatross, ghostly crew) are accepted as part of the narrative because the reader suspends disbelief.

- In short, suspension of disbelief lets readers emotionally and imaginatively engage with a story, even when it defies reality.

.
Coleridge, along with which other major poet, published Lyrical Ballads (1798), a foundational text of English Romanticism?
  1. Lord Byron
  2. Percy Bysshe Shelley
  3. William Wordsworth
  4. John Keats
সঠিক উত্তর:
William Wordsworth
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
William Wordsworth
ব্যাখ্যা

- Lyrical Ballads (1798) was a joint publication by Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth.
It marked the beginning of the English Romantic movement, emphasizing emotion, nature, imagination, and ordinary life in poetry.
Lord Byron, Shelley, and Keats were later Romantic poets, but they were not involved in the original publication.

.
In Lyrical Ballads, Coleridge was responsible for contributing poems that explored which aspect, often drawing on the supernatural and the exotic?
  1.  The beauty of everyday life and common speech
  2. Tales of social injustice and political reform.
  3. The profound beauty of the natural world.
  4. The mysteries of human nature and the power of imagination, often with a Gothic or fantastical element.
সঠিক উত্তর:
The mysteries of human nature and the power of imagination, often with a Gothic or fantastical element.
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
The mysteries of human nature and the power of imagination, often with a Gothic or fantastical element.
ব্যাখ্যা

The correct answer is: d) The mysteries of human nature and the power of imagination, often with a Gothic or fantastical element.

Explanation:
Lyrical Ballads (1798) was a joint collection by Wordsworth and Coleridge, but their contributions focused on different themes:

Wordsworth emphasized the beauty of everyday life and common speech, celebrating nature and ordinary human experiences.
Coleridge, on the other hand, explored the mysteries of human nature and the workings of the imagination, often incorporating supernatural, Gothic, or fantastical elements.
For example, in Coleridge’s The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, the poem includes maritime supernatural events, moral and psychological exploration, and fantastical imagery—typical of his style in Lyrical Ballads.

So while Wordsworth grounded his poetry in ordinary life, Coleridge delved into imagination, mystery, and the uncanny.

.
Where does the initial encounter occur in the poem “The Rime of The Ancient Mariner”? 
  1. At a wedding reception.
  2. In the open air.
  3. At sea.
  4. Inside a chapel.
সঠিক উত্তর:
At a wedding reception.
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
At a wedding reception.
ব্যাখ্যা

This poem opens with this lines-

"It is an ancient mariner
And he stoppeth one of three.
-"By thy long grey beard and glittering eye,
Now wherefore stoppest thou me?

The bridegroom's doors are opened wide,
And I am next of kin;
The guests are met, the feast is set:
Mayst hear the merry din."

So, its very clear that the initial encounter occurs at a wedding reception,  in the poem “The Rime of The Ancient Mariner”. Mariner encounters the wedding guests and narrates his story to one of them.

.
How does the Mariner compel the Wedding-Guest to listen to his tale?
  1. By offering him gold
  2. By threatening him with a dagger
  3. With his hypnotic, "glittering eye"
  4. By singing a beautiful, sad song
সঠিক উত্তর:
With his hypnotic, "glittering eye"
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
With his hypnotic, "glittering eye"
ব্যাখ্যা

"He holds him with his skinny hand,
"There was a ship," quoth he.
"Hold off! unhand me, grey-beard loon!"
Eftsoons his hand dropped he.

He holds him with his glittering eye--
The wedding-guest stood still,
And listens like a three-years' child:
The mariner hath his will.

The wedding-guest sat on a stone:
He cannot choose but hear;
And thus spake on that ancient man,
The bright-eyed mariner."

So the Mariner compels the Wedding-Guest to listen to his tale With his hypnotic, "glittering eye". So the guest could not refuse it to listen.

.
The overall tone of the poem can be described as:
  1. Light-hearted and whimsical
  2. Didactic and moralistic
  3. Solemn, eerie, and supernatural
  4. Cynical and satirical
সঠিক উত্তর:
Solemn, eerie, and supernatural
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Solemn, eerie, and supernatural
ব্যাখ্যা

- Why this answer is correct-
1. Solemnity: The poem carries a serious and moralizing undertone, warning readers about the consequences of violating nature and divine law. The Mariner’s tale is a cautionary story about guilt, repentance, and redemption.
2. Eerie and Mysterious: The poem is full of strange and unsettling imagery, such as the ghostly ship, spectral crew, and the death-like stillness of the ocean. These elements create a sense of suspense and supernatural foreboding throughout the narrative.
3. Supernatural Elements : Coleridge incorporates albatrosses with symbolic power, spirits, and divine retribution, blending the natural and supernatural worlds. The supernatural is central to the poem’s mood, reinforcing the moral and psychological tension.
4. Contrast with Other Tones : The poem is not whimsical or light-hearted, as the events are grave and often terrifying.
It is not merely didactic, though it has moral lessons; the focus is on experience and emotional impact, not direct teaching. It is not cynical or satirical, as Coleridge treats his supernatural and moral themes earnestly.

.
 "Water, water, every where, / And all the boards did shrink; / Water, water, every where, / Nor any drop to drink." This is an example of:
  1. Metaphor
  2. Simile
  3. Anaphora and repetition
  4. Personification
সঠিক উত্তর:
Anaphora and repetition
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Anaphora and repetition
ব্যাখ্যা

- These lines from "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge use the literary device of anaphora, which is the repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive lines ("Water, water, every where"). This repetition emphasizes the overwhelming presence of water. The poem also uses the technique of repetition by repeating the phrase "Water, water, every where", further highlighting the sailor's desperate situation.

১০.
Which of these literary devices is evident in descriptions like "The very deep did rot," where inanimate objects are given human qualities?
  1. Hyperbole
  2. Onomatopoeia
  3. Personification
  4. Oxymoron
সঠিক উত্তর:
Personification
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Personification
ব্যাখ্যা

- Personification is a literary device where inanimate objects, animals, or abstract ideas are given human qualities or actions. In the line “The very deep did rot”, the sea (inanimate) is described as if it can decay like a living being, which is a clear example of personification.
Hyperbole is exaggeration, onomatopoeia imitates sounds, and oxymoron combines contradictory terms—none of which apply here.

১১.
After the ship becomes becalmed, what do the sailors hang around the Mariner's neck?
  1. The dead Albatross
  2. A bag of heavy stones
  3. A wooden cross
  4. A map of the cursed sea
সঠিক উত্তর:
The dead Albatross
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
The dead Albatross
ব্যাখ্যা

- After the ship becomes becalmed in Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem, "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," the sailors hang the dead Albatross around the Mariner's neck as a punishment and a constant, physical reminder of his sin and the curse he has brought upon them.

১২.
What is the outcome of the dice game between Death and Life-in-Death?
  1. The game is a draw, so they curse the ship together
  2. Death wins the crew, and Life-in-Death wins the Mariner
  3. Life-in-Death wins both the crew and the Mariner
  4. Death wins both the crew and the Mariner
সঠিক উত্তর:
Death wins the crew, and Life-in-Death wins the Mariner
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Death wins the crew, and Life-in-Death wins the Mariner
ব্যাখ্যা

- In Samuel Taylor Coleridge's "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," Life-in-Death wins the dice game against Death, resulting in the Ancient Mariner enduring a cursed, living death and suffering, while Death wins his shipmates' souls, who then die. Life-in-Death's victory means the Mariner must live a haunted and tormented existence, unable to find peace until he completes his penance and shares his story, highlighting that his punishment is a prolonged, spiritual suffering rather than a swift end

১৩.
Besides the Mariner, who are the three people on the rescue boat?
  1. Three angelic spirits in human form
  2. The Wedding-Guest, his Bride, and the Priest
  3. The Captain, the Cook, and the Doctor
  4. The Pilot, the Pilot's Boy, and the Hermit
সঠিক উত্তর:
The Pilot, the Pilot's Boy, and the Hermit
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
The Pilot, the Pilot's Boy, and the Hermit
ব্যাখ্যা

The three people who rescue the Mariner in the final part of the poem are:
1. The Pilot: The man who is sailing the boat and first spots the Mariner's ship. He and the Hermit are terrified when the Mariner abruptly comes to life.
2. The Pilot's Boy: The Pilot's assistant, who is helping to row the boat. When the Mariner rows them to shore, the boy is frightened and laughs, believing the Mariner is a devil.
"'The Devil knows how to row'".
3. The Hermit: A religious recluse who lives in the woods and prays three times a day. He is the one who hears the Mariner's confession.Quote: After hearing the Mariner's story, the Hermit asks, 
"'what manner of man art thou?'". 

১৪.
What is the ultimate effect of the Mariner's tale on the Wedding-Guest?
  1. He wakes up "a sadder and a wiser man."
  2. He goes to the wedding and enjoys himself immensely.
  3. He forgets the tale almost immediately.
  4. He is inspired to become a sailor.
সঠিক উত্তর:
He wakes up "a sadder and a wiser man."
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
He wakes up "a sadder and a wiser man."
ব্যাখ্যা

- The tale profoundly impacts the Wedding-Guest in several key ways:
He is "stunned" and "of sense forlorn". After hearing the Mariner's strange and harrowing tale of sin and redemption, the Wedding-Guest is left in a dazed, shocked state.
He turns away from the wedding. The lively, joyful celebration he was eager to attend no longer holds any appeal. He leaves the party and goes home.
He is transformed from youthful innocence to melancholy experience. The experience changes his perspective on life, moving him from the naivety of pure happiness to a deeper, more somber understanding of the world.
He gains a new appreciation for nature and the spiritual. The Mariner's tale, with its moral lesson to "love all things both great and small," makes the Wedding-Guest more concerned with spiritual matters than worldly revelry. As a result, He wakes up "a sadder and a wiser man."

১৫.
"The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" is famously inspired by a dream experienced by which of Coleridge's friends?
  1. William Wordsworth
  2. Charles Lamb
  3. Thomas Cruikshank
  4. John Thelwall
সঠিক উত্তর:
Thomas Cruikshank
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Thomas Cruikshank
ব্যাখ্যা

- While Coleridge was collaborating with William Wordsworth on the poem, it was a dream of their neighbor and acquaintance, John Cruikshank (often referred to as Thomas Cruikshank), that provided the inspiration for the ghostly ship and skeleton sailors. This vision helped shape the supernatural elements that are central to the poem's atmosphere.

১৬.
The blurring of lines between reality and the supernatural in the poem is a strong indicator of influence from:
  1. Historical accounts of sea voyages
  2. Detailed scientific observations
  3. Folk tales and dream narratives
  4. Classical mythology
সঠিক উত্তর:
Folk tales and dream narratives
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Folk tales and dream narratives
ব্যাখ্যা

- Dream narratives: As noted in a prior search result, one of Coleridge's acquaintances had a dream about a skeleton ship with ghostly sailors, a vision that helped shape the poem's central supernatural elements. The poem itself can be interpreted as having a dreamlike, mystical quality, where events are both terrifyingly real and profoundly unreal. The blurring of the Mariner's conscious and unconscious states, such as when he falls into a trance, also ties into this influence.
Folk tales: Coleridge drew on a rich tradition of ballads and legends involving sea voyages, curses, and ghostly ships, such as the Wandering Jew and the Flying Dutchman. These ancient, oral storytelling traditions often mingle the mundane with the fantastical, giving the narrative a feeling of a timeless myth or a moral warning passed down through generations. 

- The other options are less fitting:
ক) Historical accounts of sea voyages: While Coleridge did draw on travel literature, such as Captain George Shelvocke's voyage, he used these factual accounts as a starting point to introduce supernatural elements that transcend a simple historical narrative.
খ) Detailed scientific observations: This option is the opposite of the poem's thrust. The poem deliberately goes beyond scientific explanation, showcasing a universe governed by spiritual and magical forces rather than rational, cause-and-effect processes.
ঘ) Classical mythology: While the poem draws on the broad allegorical tradition, its specific blend of the gothic supernatural, Christian themes, and oral ballad style is more indicative of the European folk and dream traditions rather than the pantheon of classical Greco-Roman mythology.

১৭.
What specific element from his friend's dream particularly captivated Coleridge and served as a foundational image for the poem?
  1. A ship sailing through a storm
  2. A skeleton ship with figures on board
  3. A lonely albatross following a ship
  4. A man telling a long, sorrowful tale
সঠিক উত্তর:
A skeleton ship with figures on board
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
A skeleton ship with figures on board
ব্যাখ্যা

- This dream, related by Coleridge's acquaintance John Cruikshank, provided the germ for one of the most chilling and iconic supernatural sequences in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. It inspired the image of the ghost ship carrying Death and Life-in-Death, who gamble for the Mariner's soul

১৮.
"The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" is divided into how many parts-
  1. six
  2. five
  3. three
  4. seven
সঠিক উত্তর:
seven
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
seven
ব্যাখ্যা

Seven parts of this poem are-

Part I: Introduces the Mariner and the Wedding-Guest, sets the scene of the voyage, the initial good fortune, and the appearance of the Albatross.
Part II: Details the Mariner's act of shooting the Albatross, the crew's initial anger, their subsequent approval when the fog lifts, and the beginning of their curse.
Part III: The ship is becalmed, the crew suffers from thirst, the appearance of the spectre-bark, and the death of the crew.
Part IV: The Mariner's isolation and suffering, his inability to pray, and his turning point when he blesses the sea snakes.
Part V: The curse begins to lift, the Mariner sleeps, spirits animate the dead crew, and the ship begins to move.
Part VI: The ship continues its journey, the Mariner has visions, the ship reaches its home port, and the spectral forms leave the dead bodies.
Part VII: The Pilot, Hermit, and Pilot's Boy rescue the Mariner, the ship sinks, and the Mariner begins his penance of traveling and telling his tale.

১৯.
What is a notable characteristic of Coleridge's imagery in the poem?
  1. It is consistently realistic and grounded in everyday experience.
  2. It frequently uses abstract concepts to convey emotion.
  3. It is highly sensory, often combining visual, auditory, and even tactile elements to create vivid and sometimes disturbing pictures.
  4. It relies heavily on classical allusions rather than original descriptions.
সঠিক উত্তর:
It is highly sensory, often combining visual, auditory, and even tactile elements to create vivid and sometimes disturbing pictures.
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
It is highly sensory, often combining visual, auditory, and even tactile elements to create vivid and sometimes disturbing pictures.
ব্যাখ্যা

- Coleridge’s imagery in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner appeals to all the senses, making readers see, hear, and feel the eerie and supernatural elements of the poem.
- Examples include the sunless sea, the ghostly ship, and the stillness of the water, which evoke a vivid, often unsettling atmosphere.
It is not purely realistic, abstract, or reliant only on classical allusions; rather, it immerses the reader in the poem’s fantastical world.

২০.
What is the moral lesson the Mariner imparts to the Wedding-Guest?
  1. Always be kind to strangers.
  2. Respect all of God's creatures and love humankind.
  3. Never embark on long sea voyages.
  4. Confess your sins immediately.
সঠিক উত্তর:
Respect all of God's creatures and love humankind.
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Respect all of God's creatures and love humankind.
ব্যাখ্যা

- The Sin: The Mariner's troubles begin with the unprovoked killing of an albatross, a seabird and a supposed good omen for the crew. The act is a crime against nature and, implicitly, against God. This brings a curse upon the ship, which is then beset by supernatural troubles.
- The Realization: Redemption only begins when the Mariner, in his solitary torment, finds himself captivated by the beauty of the sea snakes around the ship. He spontaneously blesses them, a stark contrast to his earlier thoughtless violence. This act of sincere, unprompted reverence for a seemingly lowly creature breaks the curse and causes the dead albatross to fall from his neck.
- The Penance: The Mariner's penance is to wander and retell his story to those who need to hear it, like the Wedding-Guest. The explicit moral is delivered in his own words:
"He prayeth best, who loveth best
All things both great and small; 
 For the dear God who loveth us,
He made and loveth all"

২১.
What literary form does "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" take?
  1. An epic
  2. A sonnet
  3. An ode
  4. A literary ballad
সঠিক উত্তর:
A literary ballad
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
A literary ballad
ব্যাখ্যা

- "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" as a Literary Ballad:
Narrative Poem: A ballad is, by definition, a narrative poem—it tells a story. This poem is a long, dramatic story about a sailor's mysterious journey and his spiritual awakening.
Stylistic Features: Coleridge imitated the form and conventions of older folk ballads, but with a more elaborate, literary sensibility.Structure: The poem is composed primarily of four-line stanzas (quatrains), which is a classic ballad form.
Meter and Rhyme: It generally uses an ABCB rhyme scheme and alternates between iambic tetrameter and iambic trimeter, which creates a song-like rhythm.
Language: Coleridge purposefully uses archaic language to evoke an ancient, timeless feel, a quality that distinguishes it from the more accessible language favored by some of his Romantic contemporaries like Wordsworth.
Supernatural Elements: The poem's incorporation of supernatural events and its explicit moral lesson set it apart from traditional folk ballads. 

২২.
The line "The fair breeze blew, the white foam flew, / The furrow followed free" is a strong example of-
  1. Personification
  2. Alliteration
  3. Hyperbole
  4. Onomatopoeia
সঠিক উত্তর:
Alliteration
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Alliteration
ব্যাখ্যা

- Alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds in nearby words, and in this line, the "f" sound is repeated in "fair," "flew," "foam," and "followed". In this instance, the alliteration creates a rhythmic and flowing quality that mimics the motion of the sailing ship. It reflects the excitement of the sailors at the start of their journey. Later in the poem, Coleridge uses alliteration in different ways to create other moods. For example, a shift to the 's' sound in "silent sea" mimics the sound of the waves and helps set a more melancholic, eerie tone. 

২৩.
Which river is mentioned in the poem "Kubla Khan"?
  1. Amazon
  2. Nile
  3. Alph
  4. Thames
সঠিক উত্তর:
Alph
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Alph
ব্যাখ্যা

- The River Alph in "Kubla Khan"
Fictional Invention: The sacred river Alph is a fictional creation by Coleridge, not a real geographical location. This is significant because it immediately signals that the poem, while set in a real historical place, is a work of imagination.
Symbolism of Creativity: The river Alph serves as a central symbol for the flow of creativity and inspiration. Its "ceaseless turmoil" and unpredictable course reflect the nature of artistic inspiration—at times a wild and violent force, and at other times placid and meandering.

২৪.
How does Coleridge describe the sacred river Alph?
  1. As peaceful and slow-moving
  2. As winding through caverns and ending in a tumultuous sea
  3. As completely frozen
  4. As a small stream in the desert
সঠিক উত্তর:
As winding through caverns and ending in a tumultuous sea
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
As winding through caverns and ending in a tumultuous sea
ব্যাখ্যা

- Description of the River Alph
Origin: The river's journey begins with a violent, dramatic eruption from a chasm, as if the Earth itself were breathing. This represents the primal force of inspiration.
Journey: It then flows for "five miles meandering with a mazy motion," a description that captures both the serene and winding nature of the creative process.
Conclusion: The Alph ultimately reaches "caverns measureless to man" and sinks "in tumult to a lifeless ocean". This suggests that inspiration and creativity are vast and powerful forces that can eventually be absorbed by the unconscious, a concept that mirrors the dream-like origin and incomplete nature of the poem itself. 

২৫.
"Kubla Khan" is best understood as a poem about- 
  1. The political achievements of a Mongol emperor
  2. The geography of ancient China
  3. The process and power of artistic creation
  4. The dangers of drug use
সঠিক উত্তর:
The process and power of artistic creation
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
The process and power of artistic creation
ব্যাখ্যা

The most accurate answer is c) The process and power of artistic creation. While the poem was inspired by a real historical figure and involved drug use, these details function as a backdrop for the poem's central theme of creative inspiration and its limitations. 
A poem about poetry: Many scholars and critics consider "Kubla Khan" a self-referential poem about the creative process itself. Coleridge's famous story of being interrupted by a "person from Porlock" and losing the rest of his dream-poem is often seen as a metaphor for how difficult it is to capture and sustain creative vision.
The contrast of creative power: The poem contrasts two types of creative power:Kubla Khan: Represents the artist who wields immense power and can decree a magnificent pleasure-dome into existence.
The Poet: Represents the artist who can only describe what he has seen and struggles to complete the vision, as inspiration is fragile and fleeting.
Symbolism of the landscape: The elements of the fantastical landscape, such as the river Alph, serve as symbols for the imaginative process. The river's journey from a violent chasm to a calm meandering and finally into a "sunless sea" mirrors the unpredictable flow of creativity.
The Abyssinian Maid: The final stanza introduces a woman playing a dulcimer, a figure of the muse or artistic inspiration. The poet's desire to recapture her song represents his yearning to regain the powerful creative vision he has lost.
Dream and reality: The poem's origin in an opium-induced dream reflects the blurring of lines between dreams, altered states of consciousness, and the act of creation. It suggests that the imagination, like a dream, has its own chaotic and associative logic.

২৬.
"Kubla Khan" is often described as a "fragment" or "dream-vision" because:
  1. Coleridge never intended it to be a finished poem.
  2. He was interrupted while writing it and could not recall the rest of his dream.
  3. It was part of a larger, unfinished epic poem.
  4. It only describes a small portion of Kubla Khan's life.
সঠিক উত্তর:
He was interrupted while writing it and could not recall the rest of his dream.
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
He was interrupted while writing it and could not recall the rest of his dream.
ব্যাখ্যা

- Coleridge famously explained in his preface to the poem that he composed the work after waking from an opium-induced dream. He wrote down the first part of the vision but was then interrupted by a visitor, "a person on business from Porlock." After the visitor left, Coleridge found he could no longer recall the rest of the dream, and the poem remained an unfinished fragment.

২৭.
The river Alph flows "Through caverns measureless to man / Down to a..."
  1. sunlit bay
  2. living sea
  3. sea of dreams
  4. sunless sea
সঠিক উত্তর:
sunless sea
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
sunless sea
ব্যাখ্যা

- These lines from the poem "Kubla Khan" describe the final, mysterious destination of the sacred river Alph. The imagery of the "sunless sea" deep beneath the earth contributes to the poem's atmosphere of otherworldliness and subconscious depth.

২৮.
The poem's setting, Xanadu, is depicted as a place of:
  1. Stark desolation and poverty.
  2. Intense natural beauty and artificial grandeur.
  3. A bustling trade city.
  4. A battlefield.
সঠিক উত্তর:
Intense natural beauty and artificial grandeur.
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Intense natural beauty and artificial grandeur.
ব্যাখ্যা

The poem "Kubla Khan" contrasts the "stately pleasure-dome" decreed by Kubla Khan (artificial grandeur) with the wild, natural elements surrounding it, like "gardens bright with sinuous rills" and the deep chasm where the river Alph erupts (intense natural beauty). This tension between the man-made and the natural is central to the poem's theme.

২৯.
The poem's structure is built on a contrast between- 
  1. The past and the present
  2. The East and the West
  3. Order (the dome) and Chaos (the chasm)
  4. Youth and old age
সঠিক উত্তর:
Order (the dome) and Chaos (the chasm)
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Order (the dome) and Chaos (the chasm)
ব্যাখ্যা

- The correct answer is  গ) Order (the dome) and Chaos (the chasm). Here's an elaboration on this central contrast:
 The Dome as Order
A product of human will: The "stately pleasure-dome" is not a natural feature but was built by the "decree" of the Mongol emperor Kubla Khan. This signifies human reason and the imposition of order upon the natural world.
Geometric perfection: The dome represents architectural control and the finished, rational work of art. It is a symbol of human creativity that seeks to define and contain beauty within a structured form.
The "sunny" aspect: The dome's association with light and sun suggests a world that is clear, accessible, and rational—the opposite of the hidden, mysterious chasm. 
 
The Chasm as Chaos
Untamed nature: The "deep romantic chasm" and the sacred river Alph's wild eruption represent the untamed, unpredictable power of nature. This force is "savage," "holy," and "enchanted."
Subconscious and primal urges: The chasm and the river's path into "caverns measureless to man" represent the mysterious, powerful, and often destructive forces of the subconscious and primal urges. This chaotic energy lies beneath the surface of the civilized world, always threatening to break through.
The "tumult": The "tumult" of the river as it rushes to a "lifeless ocean" symbolizes the raw, uncontrollable power of inspiration and the unknown, which can be both beautiful and frightening. 
 
Thematic Significance
This fundamental contrast is the engine of the poem. It reflects a central Romantic preoccupation with the tension between:
The Apollonian and the Dionysian: The dome representing the calm, rational, and ordered side of creation, and the chasm representing the wild, passionate, and chaotic side.
Civilization and Nature: The human desire to control and cultivate nature versus nature's inherent, unconquerable power.
Conscious and Subconscious: The deliberate act of creation (the dome) versus the untamed, wild, and dreamlike flow of inspiration (the river).

৩০.
In the speaker's vision, a damsel is playing what musical instrument?
  1. A lute
  2. A harp
  3. A flute
  4. A dulcimer
সঠিক উত্তর:
A dulcimer
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
A dulcimer
ব্যাখ্যা

- The speaker's vision includes an "Abyssinian maid" playing a musical instrument. The poem states,
"A damsel with a dulcimer
In a vision once I saw".
The maid's song, accompanied by the dulcimer, represents a perfect, divinely inspired creative vision.

৩১.
Which of the following phrases from the poem best represents a paradox or a juxtaposition of opposites?
  1. "gardens bright with sinuous rills"
  2. "a damsel with a dulcimer"
  3. "a sunny pleasure-dome with caves of ice"
  4. "forests ancient as the hills"
সঠিক উত্তর:
"a sunny pleasure-dome with caves of ice"
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
"a sunny pleasure-dome with caves of ice"
ব্যাখ্যা

- Why it is the correct answer-
Contradictory elements: The phrase directly places two completely contradictory elements side-by-side: a "sunny pleasure-dome" and "caves of ice." The idea of a sunlit, joyful structure existing in harmony with freezing, subterranean caverns is physically and logically impossible in the real world.
- Juxtaposition of opposites: This juxtaposition creates a sense of the uncanny and the fantastical, which is central to the dreamlike atmosphere of the poem. It reflects the Romantic idea of a world that is not governed by rigid, rational rules but by the fluid and often contradictory logic of the imagination.
- Thematic significance: This paradox also hints at the tension between human creation (the dome) and the powerful, untamed forces of nature (the caves). The dome may represent an attempt to impose order, but it cannot fully escape or contain the more mysterious and primal aspects of the world it inhabits.

৩২.
The pleasure-dome is primarily a symbol of what?
  1. Political oppression and tyranny
  2. The wild and untamed power of nature
  3. The beauty of fleeting romantic love
  4. Human order, reason, and the finished work of art
সঠিক উত্তর:
Human order, reason, and the finished work of art
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Human order, reason, and the finished work of art
ব্যাখ্যা

- A "stately pleasure-dome" decreed: The dome is not a natural feature but a man-made one, created by the "decree" of Kubla Khan. This reflects the human imposition of will and order upon the natural world, a triumph of human reason and control.
- The contrast with nature: The dome is explicitly contrasted with the wild and chaotic natural forces of the landscape. The river Alph erupts from a "deep romantic chasm" and sinks into a "sunless sea," representing the untamed power of nature and the unconscious. The dome, with its perfect, sunlit geometry, stands as a symbol of human-made, deliberate beauty against this wild backdrop.
- The artistic ideal: As a finished, and initially perfect, work of architecture, the dome symbolizes the ideal of a complete, controlled, and beautiful work of art. The poem as a whole, being a fragment, contrasts this ideal with the reality of an artist's struggle to fully realize and capture their creative vision.

৩৩.
 What is a major theme of the poem "Kubla Khan"?
  1. The power and limitations of imagination
  2. The importance of nature conservation
  3. The dangers of political ambition
  4. The joys of daily life
সঠিক উত্তর:
The power and limitations of imagination
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
The power and limitations of imagination
ব্যাখ্যা

- Here is a more in-depth exploration of the theme of the power and limitations of imagination in "Kubla Khan":
 
- The power of imagination
The creation of Xanadu: The poem itself is a product of Coleridge's "vision in a dream," where the speaker's imagination conjures a complete, vivid, and fantastical world. The detailed description of Xanadu, with its sunny pleasure-dome, lush gardens, and ancient forests, serves as a testament to the immense generative power of the human mind.
The sublime: The imagination allows the poet to not just create beauty but also to comprehend the sublime. The poem juxtaposes the artificial grandeur of Kubla Khan's palace with the wild, untamed power of the sacred river Alph and the "caverns measureless to man". This blending of the civilized and the savage creates an awe-inspiring and terrifying sense of the sublime, a concept central to Romanticism.
The prophetic voice: In the final stanza, the speaker envisions themselves as a prophet or magician who, by reviving the song of the Abyssinian maid, could build the dome "in air" and command respect and fear. This fantasy of being a divinely inspired, almost supernatural creator highlights the immense power the Romantics attributed to the imagination. 
 
- The limitations of imagination
The poem as a fragment: The poem is famously described as a fragment. Coleridge explained in the preface that he was interrupted by a visitor and could not recall the rest of the vision. This fragmentation serves as a powerful metaphor for the fragility and fleeting nature of creative inspiration. The poem itself is an incomplete, flawed work, which reflects the limitations of fully capturing the initial, perfect vision of the imagination.
The loss of inspiration: The final stanza is filled with a sense of regret and unfulfilled potential. The speaker recalls the Abyssinian maid's song and states, "Could I revive within me / Her symphony and song... I would build that dome in air". This shows that although the imagination has the power to create, accessing and controlling that power is often beyond the artist's grasp. The muse, once present, is now gone.
The inability to bridge the gap: The poem suggests a gap between the ideal creative vision experienced in a dream or moment of inspiration and the actual, imperfect work of art produced in the waking world. The poet can only dream and long for the creative power of the Abyssinian maid; they cannot actually become that inspired, all-powerful figure.
The interference of the real world: In a meta-commentary, Coleridge's story of the "person from Porlock" is often interpreted as a symbol of the mundane, everyday concerns that constantly interfere with and interrupt the creative process. It represents the limitations that reality imposes on the free and unfettered flow of imagination.

৩৪.
What did Kubla Khan hear "from far" amidst the tumult of the river?
  1. The song of the Abyssinian maid
  2. The cries of the wailing woman
  3. His own name being called
  4. "Ancestral voices prophesying war!"
সঠিক উত্তর:
"Ancestral voices prophesying war!"
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
"Ancestral voices prophesying war!"
ব্যাখ্যা

- These lines suggest that even amidst the created beauty and controlled environment of the pleasure-dome, the wild and uncontrollable forces of nature and history persist. The sound of "ancestral voices" rising from the "tumult" of the river reminds the reader of the violence and chaos that underlie human endeavors, even those meant to represent peace and order.

৩৫.
The poem's structure, moving from a description of Kubla Khan's decree to the violent power of nature and then to the speaker's personal vision, can be seen as reflecting:
  1. A linear historical narrative.
  2. The chaotic and associative nature of a dream.
  3. A logical argument.
  4. A detailed architectural plan.
সঠিক উত্তর:
The chaotic and associative nature of a dream.
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
The chaotic and associative nature of a dream.
ব্যাখ্যা

- The poem's structure reflects b) The chaotic and associative nature of a dream. This is a central feature of the poem, with abrupt shifts in imagery, a lack of logical transitions, and an unfinished, fragmented quality. Because-

- A "Vision in a Dream": The poem's subtitle, "Or, a Vision in a Dream. A Fragment," explicitly states its inspiration. Coleridge famously wrote the poem after waking from an opium-induced dream.
Non-linear and disjointed narrative: The poem does not follow a linear or logical progression. It jumps from the decree of a powerful emperor to a mysterious, supernatural chasm, then to the speaker's personal memory of a woman with a dulcimer. This mirrors the way scenes and ideas shift unpredictably in a dream state.
The interplay of creative forces: The poem contrasts human creative power (Kubla Khan's ordered, walled garden) with the untamed, powerful, and frightening forces of nature (the violent river and chaotic chasm). This tension between order and chaos, imagination and nature, is typical of Romantic poetry and reflects the complex, often contradictory, nature of dream logic.
The theme of lost inspiration: The poem is famously incomplete, interrupted by a visitor, "the person from Porlock". This fragmentation becomes a metaphor for the way creative inspiration, much like a dream, is fleeting and difficult to recapture.

৩৬.
The poem "Dejection: An Ode" was originally a much longer, more personal verse-letter addressed to whom?
  1. William Wordsworth
  2. Dorothy Wordsworth
  3. Sara Fricker
  4. Sara Hutchinson
সঠিক উত্তর:
Sara Hutchinson
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Sara Hutchinson
ব্যাখ্যা

- Dejection: An Ode was originally composed as a personal verse-letter to Sara Hutchinson, with whom Coleridge was emotionally close. In the poem, he expresses his deep melancholy, loss of creative inspiration, and unfulfilled emotional longing, which were originally addressed to her before the work was revised into a public ode.

৩৭.
What is the poet's final wish for the "Lady"?
  1. That she will remember him fondly
  2. That she will find a love as great as his
  3. That she may sleep peacefully and "evermore rejoice"
  4. That she will write poetry inspired by the storm
সঠিক উত্তর:
That she may sleep peacefully and "evermore rejoice"
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
That she may sleep peacefully and "evermore rejoice"
ব্যাখ্যা

- This final, tender stanza offers a selfless blessing to Sara Hutchinson, the "Dear Lady" of the poem. While the speaker remains trapped in his own "unimpassioned grief" and sleepless vigil, he wishes her the very joys he has lost. 
- The final lines state:
He hopes "gentle Sleep! with wings of healing" visits her.
He wishes she will rise "With light heart" and "Gay fancy, cheerful eyes".
He prays that "Joy lift her spirit, joy attune her voice".
The final, enduring blessing is that she may "ever, evermore rejoice". 

৩৮.
The poet states, "my shaping spirit of Imagination" has- 
  1. grown stronger with age.
  2. been misunderstood by others.
  3. fled from his soul.
  4. found a new home in philosophy.
সঠিক উত্তর:
fled from his soul.
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
fled from his soul.
ব্যাখ্যা

- In Dejection: An Ode, Coleridge laments that his “shaping spirit of Imagination”—the creative and inspiring force within him—has fled, leaving him unable to experience joy or create poetry. This reflects the central theme of the poem: the loss of emotional and creative vitality, which prevents him from fully perceiving and engaging with the beauty of nature.

৩৯.
What is the dominant tone of the poem's final stanza?
  1. Bitter and resentful
  2. Completely hopeless and despairing
  3. Tender, gentle, and selfless
  4. Joyful and optimistic
সঠিক উত্তর:
Tender, gentle, and selfless
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Tender, gentle, and selfless
ব্যাখ্যা

- Analysis of why this is the correct answer:
A stark contrast: The final stanza of the poem offers a stark and deliberate contrast to the rest of the ode, which is dominated by the speaker's overwhelming despair, numb grief, and personal torment.
A selfless blessing: Instead of focusing on his own suffering, the speaker directs his thoughts and prayers outward towards the "Dear Lady" he is addressing (believed to be Sara Hutchinson). He expresses a sincere and selfless wish for her happiness and peace.
Tender imagery: The imagery used to convey this wish is gentle and tender, a stark change from the storm-swept, tormented imagery of the previous stanza. He wishes for gentle sleep to visit her on "healing wings" and for her to wake with a "light heart".
Emphasis on joy: He blesses her with the very joy he himself has lost, hoping it will "lift her spirit, joy attune her voice". This final prayer for someone else's happiness highlights his enduring love and tender regard for her, even in his state of profound dejection. 

৪০.
The direct address, "O Lady!" and "O pure of heart!", is an example of which poetic device?
  1. Metaphor
  2. Simile
  3. Alliteration
  4. Apostrophe
সঠিক উত্তর:
Apostrophe
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Apostrophe
ব্যাখ্যা

- The poetic device used in the direct address, "O Lady!" and "O pure of heart!", is d) Apostrophe. 
Here's why:
Apostrophe defined: An apostrophe is a figure of speech in which a speaker directly addresses someone or something that is not physically present or cannot respond. This can include an absent or dead person, an inanimate object, or an abstract concept.
 In "Dejection: An Ode," the speaker is addressing Sara Hutchinson, who is not present during the scene. The address allows the speaker to express his profound despair and his philosophical thoughts about the nature of imagination and joy, making it a form of a poetic soliloquy.  The device is particularly common in odes, a form of poetry often addressed to a specific subject, idea, or person.

৪১.
What was the original title of "Dejection: An Ode"?
  1. "Ode on a Grecian Urn"
  2. "A Letter to Wordsworth"
  3. "A Letter to [Asra]"
  4. "Dejection: A Poem" 
সঠিক উত্তর:
"A Letter to [Asra]"
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
"A Letter to [Asra]"
ব্যাখ্যা

- The poem was originally composed as a letter to Coleridge’s friend, Sara Hutchinson (sometimes referred to as Asra in drafts). It was later revised and published as “Dejection: An Ode” (1802), transforming the personal letter into a lyrical and reflective ode exploring dejection, nature, and the poet’s inner state.

৪২.
"Dejection an Ode" opens with Coleridge wishing the storm for-
  1.  Last for an entire week
  2. Bring with it an abundant snowfall
  3. Shake him out of his deep dejection
  4. Pass by without leaving any trac
সঠিক উত্তর:
Shake him out of his deep dejection
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Shake him out of his deep dejection
ব্যাখ্যা

- In Dejection: An Ode, Coleridge wishes for a storm as a way to stir his stagnant emotions and break free from his profound melancholy and lack of inspiration.
The storm symbolizes a potential catalyst for emotional renewal, though he ultimately realizes that external forces alone cannot restore his inner joy.

৪৩.
The speaker's grief is described as "drowsy" and "unimpassioned." This suggests that his dejection is characterized by a feeling of:
  1. Explosive rage
  2. Sharp, acute sadness
  3. Numbness and emotional paralysis
  4. Quiet hopefulness.
সঠিক উত্তর:
Numbness and emotional paralysis
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Numbness and emotional paralysis
ব্যাখ্যা

- In Dejection: An Ode, the speaker describes his grief as “drowsy” and “unimpassioned,” indicating that it is not sharp or intense but dull, heavy, and immobilizing.
This reflects a state of emotional numbness and paralysis, where he is unable to feel joy or be inspired by the beauty of nature.

৪৪.
In the first stanza, what specific weather pattern does the speaker observe that suggests an impending storm?
  1. An unusually calm, windless sky
  2. A new moon with the old moon "in her arms"
  3. The rapid movement of heavy clouds
  4. A sudden and unexpected downpour
সঠিক উত্তর:
A new moon with the old moon "in her arms"
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
A new moon with the old moon "in her arms"
ব্যাখ্যা

- This is a direct reference to a weather sign from the ballad of "Sir Patrick Spence," which Coleridge quotes as the epigraph for his poem. According to sailors' lore, when the faint, dark shadow of the full moon appears within the bright crescent of the new moon, it is an omen of a coming storm. The speaker notes this weather pattern and expresses his fear that a "deadly storm" is on its way, mirroring his own inner turmoil and dejection.

৪৫.
What literary device is exemplified in the lines, "A grief without a pang, void, dark, and drear, / A stifled, drowsy, unimpassioned grief"?
  1. Metaphor
  2. Alliteration
  3. Personification
  4. Paradox
সঠিক উত্তর:
Paradox
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
Paradox
ব্যাখ্যা

Contradictory ideas: The essence of paradox is the juxtaposition of seemingly contradictory concepts that, upon closer inspection, reveal a deeper truth. Grief is typically associated with intense emotion and pain ("a pang"). The speaker's description of a "grief without a pang" and "unimpassioned grief" presents a contradiction that highlights his state of emotional numbness.
The nature of dejection: In Dejection: An Ode, the poet's crisis isn't simply sadness, but the inability to feel joy or even sorrow in its normal, expressive form. His dejection is a state of numbness, and this paradoxical description of his grief—a feeling that lacks its essential, most visceral component—is the perfect way to communicate that inner emptiness.

৪৬.
 What is the central metaphor of the Aeolian harp in the poem?
  1. The heart of the "Dear Lady"
  2. The sound of the wind through the trees
  3. The poet's mind, played upon by external forces
  4. A symbol of ancient music
সঠিক উত্তর:
The poet's mind, played upon by external forces
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
The poet's mind, played upon by external forces
ব্যাখ্যা

The central metaphor of the Aeolian harp in Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem is c) The poet's mind, played upon by external forces. 
Here's a deeper look at the metaphor and its implications:
The harp and the mind: In the poem, the Aeolian harp, a stringed instrument that creates music when wind blows over it, serves as a representation of the poet's passive, receptive mind. Like the strings of the harp, the poet's mind is played upon by the "wind," or external forces of nature and inspiration, to create "music" in the form of poetry.
The wind and divine inspiration: The wind in this metaphor represents more than a simple natural phenomenon. Coleridge extends the image to suggest that a "vast, one intellectual breeze" animates all of nature, and this same spiritual force is what breathes life into the poet's mind. In this way, the metaphor connects the creative process directly to divine presence.
A reflection of Romanticism: This image was widely used by Romantic poets to emphasize their focus on nature and the belief that inspiration and spiritual insight come from the outside world, not from strict, logical intellect. The poet is not an active, deliberate creator but a passive vessel through which the transcendent power of nature finds expression.
The conflict with orthodox belief: In the final stanza of the poem, the speaker's fiancée, Sara, disapproves of his "unhallowed" speculation that God is a part of nature. The speaker retracts his pantheistic musings, showing a tension between this Romantic idea of inspiration and his commitment to orthodox Christianity. 

৪৭.
Which year was the edited, final version of "Dejection: An Ode" published?
  1. 1802
  2. 1817
  3. 1798
  4. 1820
সঠিক উত্তর:
1817
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
1817
ব্যাখ্যা

The definitive, edited version of "Dejection: An Ode" was published in B) 1817. It was included in Coleridge's collection of poems, Sibylline Leaves. 
This is distinct from the poem's initial publication:
An earlier draft, titled "A Letter to Sara Hutchinson," was composed in April 1802.
A revised, shorter version was first published in the Morning Post newspaper in October 1802. 

৪৮.
The epigraph of "Dejection: An Ode" is taken from which ballad?
  1. "La Belle Dame Sans Merci"
  2. "The Unquiet Grave"
  3. "Ballad of Sir Patrick Spence"
  4. "Bonny Barbara Allen"
সঠিক উত্তর:
"Ballad of Sir Patrick Spence"
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
"Ballad of Sir Patrick Spence"
ব্যাখ্যা

The epigraph of "Dejection: An Ode" is taken from the Scottish folk ballad, "Ballad of Sir Patrick Spence". The quote Coleridge uses from the ballad sets a somber, ominous tone for the poem: 
 
"Late, late yestreen I saw the new Moon, 
With the old Moon in her arms; 
And I fear, I fear, my Master dear! 
We shall have a deadly storm." 

This foreshadowing of a "deadly storm" mirrors Coleridge's internal emotional turmoil and poetic dejection. 

৪৯.
 According to the speaker, what is the true source of beauty and the ability to perceive it in nature? 
  1. The external world
  2. A person's inner joy
  3. A strong wind
  4. Good friendships
সঠিক উত্তর:
A person's inner joy
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
A person's inner joy
ব্যাখ্যা

- In Dejection: An Ode, Coleridge emphasizes that the perception of beauty in nature depends on the observer’s inner emotional state. The speaker laments that although the external world is beautiful, his own dejection prevents him from experiencing joy or inspiration. True appreciation of nature arises from emotional vitality and inner delight, not from the external surroundings alone.

৫০.
Ultimately, the poem suggests that dejection is primarily a crisis of- 
  1. faith
  2. health
  3. imagination
  4. love
সঠিক উত্তর:
imagination
উত্তর
সঠিক উত্তর:
imagination
ব্যাখ্যা

- Dejection as a creative crisis: Coleridge's dejection is a state of numbness and creative paralysis. The speaker observes the night sky but no longer feels its inspiration, as previously.
The inner world shapes the outer world: The poem suggests joy is an internal force, a "beautiful and beauty-making power," which allows perception and engagement with the external world. When inner joy fades, the natural world becomes "a cold world allowed to the poor loveless ever-anxious crowd".
- Imagination as the source of joy: The poem identifies this inner power as the "shaping spirit of Imagination". The speaker's primary concern is that his afflictions have suspended this innate creative faculty, making creation or genuine feeling impossible.
A contrast with the past: The speaker remembers a time when imagination allowed transcendence of distress, using "misfortunes [as] the stuff whence Fancy made me dreams of happiness". The present crisis involves the loss of this ability and the resulting loss of joy.