1 Who is the "O'Leary" mentioned in the poem? The painter Joseph O'Leary The eighteenth-century general William O'Leary The Irish separatist John O'Leary The mythical Irish warrior O'Leary 2 How does the speaker conceive of the relationship between Irish people today and past Irish heroes? Modern Ireland has no heroes, because their ancestors all left the country Ireland's modern middle class has betrayed the heroes of the past Modern Ireland would distress its historical heroes, but this is a positive thing Ireland today carries the legacy of past heroes, even those whose names are lost to history 3 Yeats was personally acquainted with which of the people mentioned in this poem? Tone Emmet O'Leary Fitzgerald 4 Which of the following describes the poem's tone? Jocular Dreamy Bitter Businesslike 5 What is this poem's rhyme scheme? AABBCCDD ABCDEF ABBACDDC ABBCDCD 6 What type of stanzas make up this poem? Quatrains Sestets Quintains Octaves 7 What does the word "weigh" mean in the context of this poem? Offer input Measure Carry Consider 8 What is closest to a definition of the word "delirium" as used in the poem? ecstasy unconsciousness stupidity illness 9 Who were the "wild geese"? Yeats's generation of Irish artists and writers Irish soldiers fighting in foreign armies The working classes of Ireland's rural counties Orphaned children growing up in Dublin 10 How does Yeats evoke the disjunction between past and present Irish people? By imagining how a single city has changed over the centuries By imagining them having a conversation By picturing various figures of Irish history touring modern Dublin By describing their respective homes and clothes 11 Which sound produces assonance in the phrase "Was it for this"? The short I sound The S sound The O sound There is no assonance in this phrase 12 What claim is made in the poem's refrain? That there is no need for Ireland to be independent That O'Leary is dead but his legacy lives on That Romantic Ireland is dead That poets, not soldiers, will save Ireland 13 When did Robert Emmet die? In 1803, when he was executed for planning a rebellion In 1939, shortly before Yeats's own death In 1798, during a shootout with British forces In 1913, during a dispute over the Dublin lock-out 14 The phrase "maddened every mother’s son" contains which of the following? Synecdoche Personification Alliteration End rhyme 15 Which 1913 event does the poem's title refer to? The Easter Rising Bloody Sunday The Dublin Lock-Out The Spanish Flu epidemic 16 Which of the following lines contains the clearest instance of verbal irony? "men were born to pray and save" "little time had they to pray" "Romantic Ireland’s dead and gone" "They weighed so lightly what they gave" 17 In which of the poem's stanzas is the refrain somewhat altered? The third The first The sixth The fourth 18 Who is the implied addressee of the poem? Ireland's middle-class population in the twentieth century Irish soldiers O'Leary The speaker's child 19 The phrase "some woman's yellow hair" is an instance of what? Situational irony Synecdoche Alliteration Simile 20 What do Ireland's middle classes focus on, according to the speaker? Luxurious material goods Prayer and money Education and travel Food and wine 21 Who is the poem's protagonist? Robert Emmet Ireland's children Fighters on behalf of Irish nationalism and independence The speaker 22 The phrase "They have gone about the world like wind" is an instance of what device? Simile Metaphor Verbal Irony Assonance 23 What is this poem's meter? Trochaic hexameter Iambic pentameter Anapestic trimeter Iambic tetrameter 24 Who was Edward Fitzgerald? A friend of the poet's who died shortly before this work was written A leader of the group known as the United Irishmen An Irish spy in the nineteenth century A fictional character from a James Joyce novel 25 The claim that "Romantic Ireland's dead" is an instance of what? Metaphor Simile Metonymy Synecdoche