更多"Comment briefly on Robert Frost’s n"的相关试题:
[单项选择]Robert Lee Frost’s poetry focuses on people in ( )
A. New Orland
B. New York
C. New England
D. New Jersey
[单项选择]Robert Lee Frost’s ______ won him the first Pulitzer Prizes, which includes "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening".
A. North Boston
B. The Gift Outright
C. New Hampshire
D. A Boy’s Will
[填空题]Robert Frost was born in San Francisco in 1875. When he was at the age of ten, he was sent to New England, an area which (36) almost all of his poetry. He got a good education at Dartmouth College, New England, and Hard (37) . He became a schoolmaster for a short time, and then a farm laborer. During this period he wrote poetry but with little (38) From 1912 to 1915, he lived in New England, where he became (39) with several poets, including Edward Thomas, and published a Boy’s Will in 1913 and North of Boston in 1914. In America his poetry was soon (40) , and he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize on four (41) between 1924 and 1943. He went on writing (42) throughout his life, publishing Steeple Bush at the age of seventy-two. He died in 1963.
Frost’s poems are revolutionary because they lack the (43) of language skills. Many of his lines and sentences are plain and in themselves nothing. (44
[单项选择]Robert Frost described ( ) as "a book of people", which shows a brilliant insight into New England character and the background that formed it.
A. North of Boston
B. A Boy’s Will
C. A Witness Tree
D. A Further Range
[单项选择]Robert Frost was an Amencan________.
A. essayist
B. playwright
C. poet
D. novelist
[填空题]Icebergs are among nature’s most spectacular creations, and yet most people have never seen one. A vague air of mystery envelops them. They come into being- somewhere-in faraway, frigid (寒冷的) waters, amid thunderous noise and splash- ing turbulence, which in most cases no one hears or sees. They exist only a short time and then slowly Waste away just as unnoticed.
Objects of sheerest beauty, they have been called. Appearing in an endless variety of shapes, they may be dazzlingly white, or they may be glassy blue, green or purple, tinted faintly or in darker hues. They are graceful, stately, inspiring in calm, sunlit seas.
But they are also called frightening and dangerous, and that they are-in the night, in the fog and in storms. Even in clear weather one is wise to stay a safe distance away from them. Most of their bulk is hidden below the water, so their underwater parts may extend out far beyond the visible top. Also, they may roll over unexpectedly, churning the water