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Jeopardy: Poetic Quotations, Industrial Revolution, American Romanticism, Poetic Terms, Fireside Poets, Washington Irvin

Test your knowledge in this Jeopardy game about poetic quotations, the Industrial Revolution, American Romanticism, poetic terms, Fireside Poets, and Washington Irving.

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Jeopardy: Poetic Quotations, Industrial Revolution, American Romanticism, Poetic Terms, Fireside Poets, Washington Irvin

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  1. THIS IS Jeopardy

  2. Your With Host... Professor Redding

  3. Jeopardy Poetic Quotations Industrial Revolution American Romanticism Poetic Terms Fireside Poets Washington Irving 100 100 100 100 100 100 200 200 200 200 200 200 300 300 300 300 300 300 400 400 400 400 400 400 500 500 500 500 500 500

  4. “No more shall feel the victor’s tread,/ or know conquered knee/ The harpies of the shore shall pluck/ The eagle of the sea!” A 100

  5. Oliver Wendell Holmes “Old Ironsides” A 100

  6. But the sea, the sea in the darkness calls:/ The little waves, with their soft, white hands,/ Efface the footprints in the sands, A 200

  7. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow “The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls” A 200

  8. “Build thee more stately mansions, O my soul/ As the swift seasons roll!/ Leave thy low vaulted past!/ Let each new temple, nobler than the last,/ Till though art at length free,/ Leaving thine outgrown shell by life’s unresting sea! A 300

  9. Oliver Wendell Holmes “The Chambered Nautilus” A 300

  10. “In the long, sleepless watches of the night,/ A gentle face – the face of one long dead/ Looks at me from the wall, where round its head/ The night lamp casts a halo of pale light.” A 400

  11. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow “Cross of Snow” A 400

  12. “By an unfaltering trust, approach thy grave,/ Like one who wraps the drapery of his couch/ About him, and lies down to pleasant dreams.” A 500

  13. William Cullen Bryant “Thanatopsis” A 500

  14. The I.R. had this positive result for U.S. businesses and the country’s economy. B 100

  15. More goods were being produced more quickly. B 100

  16. This new development or device allowed production speed and efficiency to rapidly increase for factories. B 200

  17. The Assembly Line B 200

  18. Even though the I.R. allowed mass immigration to occur in the U.S., these negative effects were the result. (- mention 2) B 300

  19. Overcrowding • Poor housing conditions/ghettos form • Childhood labor among very poor families B 300

  20. Those arguing against the I.R. stated these “natural” reasons protesting industry… B 400

  21. Nature was becoming tainted, polluted, and less commonly noticed b/c of all the industry. • Nature was being sacrificed for greed. B 400

  22. Romanticism was a response to both the Industrial Revolution and this earlier literary movement. B 500

  23. Rationalism OR Colonialism B 500

  24. This form of writing is considered Romanticism’s highest expression of imagination. C 100

  25. Poetry C 100

  26. Romantic writers placed faith in the power of _______, and instead of finding inspiration in towns and civilization, Romantic writers found it in ________. C 200

  27. Imagination & Nature C 200

  28. Irving’s classic Romantic character Rip Vann Winkle possesses any of these 2 qualities of the Romantic hero. C 300

  29. Loves nature; avoids town life • Is innocent and pure to purpose • 3. Has knowledge of people and life based on intuition, not formal learning C 300

  30. DAILY DOUBLE DAILY DOUBLE Place A Wager C 400

  31. American Romantic writers rejected rationalism because they believed Romanticism was superior for this reason. C 400

  32. The imagination could apprehend truths that the “rational” mind could never reach. C 400

  33. The American Romantic movement spanned these dates in history… C 500

  34. 1800 - 1840 C 500

  35. This poetic device gives human qualities to non-human things, as in “And many an eye has danced to see/ That banner in the sky.” D 100

  36. Personification D 100

  37. This poetic device directly compares two things that are not usually very similar, as in “Human spiders spin and spin,/ Backward down their threads so thin/ Dropping, each a hempen bulk.” D 200

  38. Metaphor D 200

  39. “And through the clothesline posts/ Looked in like tall and sheeted ghosts.” This poetic device compares two things that are not usually very similar by using the words “like” or “as”. D 300

  40. Simile D 300

  41. This poetic device uses language to evoke a picture or concrete sensation of one of the five senses. “We watched the first red blaze appear,/ Heard the sharp crackle, caught the gleam/ On whitewashed wall and sagging beam.” D 400

  42. Imagery D 400

  43. This poetic device uses the repetition of consonant sounds to add emphasis or effect, as in “Yet a few days, and thee/ The all beholding sun shall see no more/ In all his course.” D 500

  44. Alliteration D 500

  45. In Whittier’s “Snow-Bound,” the poet makes multiple shifts from reality to fantasy and back for what Romantic reason? E 100

  46. He is showing how one’s memory remains childlike. Or He is attempting to show usage and the importance of the imagination to Romanticism. E 100

  47. How does Longfellow’s “The Ropewalk” respond to the hard, physical labor Americans are performing? In other words, what does he say this sort of labor does to people? E 200

  48. It dehumanizes them E 200

  49. What message does the refrain communicate in Longfellow’s “The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls through the overall repetition of the poem? E 300

  50. That regardless of the path of each person’s life, Nature will still continually take its course. E 300

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