1 What season does this poem take place in? Spring Winter Fall Summer 2 What constellation do the speaker and her partner notice? Ursa Major Orion Hydra Centaurus 3 What does the speaker say her mouth is full of? sea dust ash stars 4 What makes the sound of "thunder" in the poem? the supernova rolling trash cans the bending trees the speaker's voice 5 "Look, we are not _________ things" unspectacular these vulnerable unremarkable these terrified 6 "I wish to reclaim _______" the rising what's forgotten my birthright our skyline 7 "Man, we should really learn _______" more about Kentucky the needs of those around us the names of these trees some new constellations 8 Which of the following does the speaker NOT say she wants to lean towards/into? the spotlight of streetlight what's larger in us our synapses and flesh how we were born 9 What does the speaker imagine saying "No" to? the dust of stars the rising tides winter's icy hand the arrows we make 10 Which of the following best describes the shift in mood during the poem? betrayed to angry blissful to frightened mournful to relaxed confined to inspiring 11 What does the speaker imagine we can "use our bodies to bargain" for? equal representation the safety of others and earth recognition and prestige better homes 12 Which of the following does NOT describe the speaker's ideas of a better world? loving selfish defiant fearless 13 What type of sentence dominates the second half of the poem? Declarative Exclamatory Persuasive Interrogative 14 What poetic technique does Limón use very rarely at the beginning of the poem, and more towards the end? Personification Enjambment Rhyme Visual imagery 15 What animal does the speaker compare herself to? spiders horses raccoons dogs 16 Which of the following causes does the speaker seem to advocate for in the poem? Environmental justice Religious freedom Gun control Education reform 17 Which of the following boundaries is Ada Limón NOT exploring prominently in this poem? The domestic and the outside world The terrestrial and the celestial The mechanical and the organic The mundane and the transcendent 18 How many stanzas does this poem have? None 15 1 28 19 What is this poem's meter? Dactylic hexameter Free verse Trochaic trimeter Iambic pentameter 20 In what book did this poem appear? Lucky Wreck Sharks in the Rivers The Carrying Bright Dead Things 21 Where was this poem first published? Instagram In a book The Smithsonian Magazine Poem-a-day by the Academy of American Poets 22 Who does "you" likely refer to in this poem? the reader Orion the poet's dog the poet's husband 23 What is Ada Limón's full-time occupation, outside of writing? Horse racing Politician None Professor 24 Which of the following positions did Ada Limón take up in 2022? Professor Emerita U.S. Poet Laureate Presidential Poet Editor-in-chief of Poetry Magazine 25 Which of the following is true about stars? That all the stars in our sky are already dead That our bodies will one day all turn into stars That the stars we see have existed forever That we are seeing light from the past when we look at stars