1 Which book did this poem first appear in? Cathleen Ní Houlihan A Book of Irish Verse The Tower The Rose 2 What does "glad" most closely mean in this work's context? Happy Comfortable Pleasing Soft 3 What is the poem's meter? Iambic pentameter Dactylic Pentameter Free Verse Iambic Tetrameter 4 Which real-life figure was the poem likely addressed to? Teresa Deevy Maud Gonne Georgiana Hyde-Lees James Joyce 5 Which best describes the relationship between the speaker and the addressee? Lost love Political solidarity Familial obligation Baseless hatred 6 Which of the following words is an instance of onomatopoeia? Shadows Crowd Grace Murmur 7 Which does NOT describe the poem's tone? Bitter Melancholy Regretful Zealous 8 How does the speaker characterize his own love as distinct? He explains that he has loved the addressee for longer than anyone else He insists that his love is a mystical, almost magic force He argues that he actually wants to help the addressee rather than just admire her He implies that he loves the addressee for non-superficial reasons 9 The poem's contrast between the home and the wilderness is an instance of which of the following? Hyperbole Personification Juxtaposition Parallelism 10 Which best describes the poem's setting? A magical realm A Victorian Dublin schoolyard An abandoned castle in Europe A house in twentieth-century Ireland 11 How many stanzas are in this poem? One Three Five Four 12 What is the poem's rhyme scheme? ABAB ABBA AABB ABC 13 Which line features alliterative G sounds? When you are old and grey and full of sleep Murmur, a little sadly, how Love fled How many loved your moments of glad grace But one man loved the pilgrim soul in you 14 Which emotion is personified in this poem? Sadness Love Regret Fury 15 Which of the following is true of Maud Gonne? She was best known as a painter She was an Irish revolutionary She was American She was opposed to Yeats's radical politics 16 Which of the following is true of this poem? It is written in the second person It is a direct commentary on Irish independence It is written from the point of view of an inanimate object Its primary theme is the nature of consciousness 17 Which is a conflict in the poem? The disagreement between a young woman and her parents The dislike between the speaker and the woman he is engaged to The fight between Irish revolutionaries and the British government The tension between youthful passion and the jadedness of age 18 Who is the poem's speaker? An old man looking back at his youth A young woman looking forward to old age A house remembering everything that has happened within its walls An unidentified man, most likely a version of Yeats himself 19 Which of the following is true of this poem and the way it engages with time? It mostly takes place in a hypothetical, imagined future It is about time travel to Ireland's past It describes a person who cannot distinguish the past from the future It takes place over a series of flashbacks 20 Which of the following themes does this poem engage with most? Music and art Nature and its destruction Motherhood Aging and time 21 This poem is based on an earlier work by whom? Pierre de Ronsard Petrarch Seamus Heaney Christina Rosetti 22 How is the addressee characterized by the speaker? As a kind person whose anger disguises her good intentions As a person so repressed by the norms of her time that she has no real personality As a likable but cruel schemer As superficially charming, but full of hidden depths 23 What types of stanzas are in the poem? Tercets Couplets Octaves Quatrains 24 The phrase "when you are old and grey" contains which of the following? Simile End rhyme Metonymy Allusion 25 Which of the following is one meaning of the word "pilgrim"? Romantic and softhearted Sickly A traveler to a religious site A gifted student