5.” Jokc! Said Carlier, hitching himselt forward on his seat. i am nungry - i ani aicK - aon i joke! I hatc hypocrites. You arc a hypocrite. You arc a slavc-delaer. I am a s!ave-dealer. Therc is nothing but slavc-dcalers in the curscd country. I mean to havc sugar in my coffe today, abyhow!”
tyj.. k- ■ ■ ). .kiŁ .m *.
V
a) Why docs Carlier think of himsclf and his companion as “slave - dcalcrs”
b) What is the ultimate outeome of that exchangc of words?
tiJcM auJ. W:> ioj ?
6. “...andthis
Our marriage bed, and marriage tempie is;
Though parents grudge, and you. we arc met.
And cloistered in these living walls of ict."
.............................
a) What is mcant by the °living walls of jct*'?
d.. .................
B. Provide relevant answers by completing the following sentences.
1. ‘The Dream of the Rood" attributed to.......................is the first
English pocm written incomcntion of.?......................................
2. The mcdicval ideał of...(J/u.........is closely linked with...
.........................., and both find their attistic expression in the literary genre known
as.............
3. The man who facilitated a wider circulation of literaturę by introducing printing in England
as the end of.... X^:'.......Century was. :<$??....
. - « j}.t '
4. ‘Conceit’ is a distinctive characteristic of... .-2/A..........Poctry, and can
be described as. .r2.19.^1... 9422. ii. l.tiś.L. ..........
.......łtifyit...............................................................................................
5. .yl.dhCu.... ukM&U........... is the author of the great epic poem of the 17*** century,
^ (V S ■' rP i S' ^
known as the English religious epic, and entitled.....i/Jfl&bJG. .......................