All GRE Subject Test: Literature in English Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Gre Subject Test: Literature In English
This British poet began one of his best-known works, a highly allusive poem about the small inner torments of a modern man, with the lines “Let us go then, you and I.”
e. e. cummings
Ted Hughes
Ezra Pound
W. B. Yeats
T. S. Eliot
T. S. Eliot
This poem is T.S. Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,” a modernist classic. The poem represented an important shift from older forms of verse to a looser, more imagistic modern form. Eliot, who lived from 1888 to 1965, is one of the best-known British poets of his times, although he was actually born in America. He is known for his critical work such as the essay “Tradition and the Individual Talent,” his plays, and his frequently anthologized poems, including “The Waste Land,” “The Hollow Men,” “Ash Wednesday,” and “Four Quartets.” He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1948.
Line adapted from "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" by T. S. Eliot, l.1 (1920)
Example Question #2 : Identification Of British Poetry After 1925
This poet, who wrote vividly about his experiences at the Battles of the Somme and Ypres in poems concerning World War I, also wrote The Good Soldier and Parade’s End. Who is he?
Hart Crane
William Carlos Williams
Ernest Hemingway
Ford Madox Ford
Siegfried Sassoon
Ford Madox Ford
Although Sassoon is one of the best known poets of the First World War, the poet in question is actually Ford Madox Ford, who was a novelist as well as an editor and a critic. Among Ford’s volumes of poetry is one he wrote as a soldier during the war: On Heaven, and Poems Written on Active Service.
Example Question #2 : Gre Subject Test: Literature In English
This English-born poet and visual artist spent much of her life in Paris, where she wrote work distinguished by its feminist and Futurist influences and its avant-garde vocabulary and syntax. Some distinctive works include Songs to Joannes, Feminist Manifesto and “Aphorisms on Futurism.” Who is she?
Gertrude Stein
Marie Laurencin
Djuna Barnes
Virginia Woolf
Mina Loy
Mina Loy
The poet described is Mina Loy. Djuna Barnes was the American-born poet, playwright, and fiction writer who wrote Nightwood; Gertrude Stein was the American-born poet and visual artist who hosted famous salons in Paris; Virginia Woolf was an English essayist and novelist who wrote such classics as the essay A Room of One’s Own and the novel Mrs. Dalloway; and Marie Laurencin was a French poet, printmaker, and painter who was often identified as Guillaume Apollinaire’s muse.
Example Question #4 : Identification Of British Poetry After 1925
This English-American poet’s most famous poems include “Stop All the Clocks” (alternately titled “Funeral Blues”) and “Musée des Beaux Arts,” in which he uses Pieter Bruegel’s painting Landscape with the Fall of Icarus to examine human suffering and mundane daily life. Who is he?
Wallace Stevens
T. S. Eliot
Ted Hughes
W. H. Auden
e. e. cummings
W. H. Auden
This poet is W. H. Auden, who wrote everything from limericks and haikus to ballads and villanelles. His work examined romantic relationships, politics, nature, religion, art, and ethics. He lived from 1907 to 1973.
Example Question #3 : Gre Subject Test: Literature In English
This Irish Nobel Prize-winning poet is famous for works such as “Digging” and his or her modern translation of Beowulf.
Lady Gregory Augusta
W. B. Yeats
Robert Burns
Seamus Heaney
Ted Hughes
Seamus Heaney
Heaney, born in Northern Ireland in 1939, published more than a dozen volumes of poetry and wrote or edited many more critical works, anthologies, and translations. He is considered one of Ireland’s greatest poets.
Example Question #4 : Gre Subject Test: Literature In English
Which Nobel Prize-winning Irish poet wrote such works as “The Second Coming” and “The Lake Isle of Innisfree” and helped found the Abbey Theatre?
Seamus Heaney
W. B. Yeats
Ted Hughes
Lady Gregory Augusta
Robert Burns
W. B. Yeats
This poet is William Butler Yeats, who, along with Seamus Heaney, is one of Ireland’s best known poets. Born in Dublin in 1865, Yeats was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1923 and was a major figure in the Irish Literary Revival movement. His work was preoccupied with themes of Irish mythology and transcendentalism, and the poems mentioned above are two of his most famous.
Example Question #5 : Gre Subject Test: Literature In English
This modernist poet, famously married to Sylvia Plath, published poetry collections including The Hawk in the Rain, Lupercal, and Birthday Letters.
W. H. Auden
John Ashbery
Wallace Stevens
Ted Hughes
T. S. Eliot
Ted Hughes
Born in Yorkshire, Ted Hughes became England's Poet Laureate in 1984 and was a translator and children’s book author in addition to a poet and a critic. Hughes is also known for co-editing the 1982 Rattle Bag and 1997 School Bag anthologies with Irish poet Seamus Heaney.
Example Question #6 : Gre Subject Test: Literature In English
This post-war English poet and librarian was known for his obscenity and frank examination of modern life in poems such as “This Be the Verse,” “The Life with a Hole in It” and “Aubade.”
Ted Hughes
John Ashbery
Wallace Stevens
Conrad Aiken
Philip Larkin
Philip Larkin
The poet described is Philip Larkin, who was born in Coventry in 1922. His poetry is distinguished by a cynical, forthright treatment of romance, children, sexuality, politics, and daily life.
Example Question #7 : Gre Subject Test: Literature In English
Britain’s current (2015) Poet Laureate has published volumes including Standing Female Nude, Fleshweathercock and Other Poems, and The World’s Wife, the latter of which refigures classically male-centric myths and fairy tales to focus on the female characters. Who is she?
Anne Waldman
Rita Dove
Carol Ann Duffy
Mary Oliver
Marianne Moore
Carol Ann Duffy
Britain’s current (2015) Poet Laureate is Carol Ann Duffy, a writer whose work is often rooted in fantasy, fairy tales, and feminism.
Example Question #8 : Gre Subject Test: Literature In English
Which post-war British poet also published detective novels under the name Nicholas Blake and was an ardent supporter of communism in his youth?
Conrad Aiken
Cecil Day-Lewis
Hart Crane
W. H. Auden
T. S. Eliot
Cecil Day-Lewis
Cecil Day-Lewis, father of the actor Daniel Day-Lewis, was known for publishing nearly two dozen detective novels in addition to many collections of poetry. These poetry volumes include titles such as From Feathers to Iron, Pegasus and Other Poems, and The Whispering Roots and Other Poems. Day-Lewis’s style was often conflicted—at times lyrical or romantic, at times aggressively Marxist.