Thursday, June 26, 2025

100 multiple-choice questions on “Ode to the West Wind” by Percy Bysshe Shelley

Here's a comprehensive set of 100 multiple-choice questions on “Ode to the West Wind” by Percy Bysshe Shelley, each with the correct answer clearly marked:


1–10: Basics & Context

  1. Who is the poet of "Ode to the West Wind"?
    A) Wordsworth  B) Keats  C) Shelley  D) Byron 

  2. In which year was it written?
    A) 1815  B) 1819  C) 1821  D) 1825 

  3. When was it first published?
    A) 1819  B) 1820  C) 1825  D) 1830 

  4. What is its poetic form?
    A) Sonnet  B) Ode  C) Ballad  D) Limerick 

  5. What is the rhyme scheme?
    A) ABAB  B) AABB  C) Terza rima (ABA BCB CDC… EE)  D) Free verse 

  6. How many cantos does it have?
    A) 3  B) 4  C) 5  D) 6 

  7. Which meter is used?
    A) Iambic pentameter  B) Anapestic  C) Trochaic  D) Dactylic
    A) Iambic pentameter 

  8. What is the central theme?
    A) Love and beauty  B) Nature's power, change, renewal  C) Death and suffering  D) War and heroism 

  9. Which line appears at its close?
    A) “Beauty is truth…”
    B) “If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?”
    C) “O wild West Wind, thou breath…”
    D) “I fall upon the thorns…”

  10. What does the West Wind symbolize?
    A) Power of kings  B) Death and rebirth  C) Eternal suffering  D) Religious devotion 

11–20: Imagery in the First Canto

  1. What scatters “dead leaves” in canto I?
    A) Autumn  B) Destroyer  C) West Wind  D) Speaker’s dreams 

  2. The wind is referred to as a:
    A) Chariot  B) Enchanter  C) Wild Spirit  D) Prophet

  3. The “azure sister” refers to:
    A) East Wind  B) West Wind  C) Spring Wind  D) Wind’s companion
    A) East Wind 

  4. The word "chariotest" implies:
    A) Stillness  B) Motion  C) Destruction  D) Silence

  5. The wind is called both:
    A) Destroyer and Preserver  B) Healer and Nurturer
    C) Teacher and Prophet  D) Lover and Fighter 

  6. The dead leaves are likened to:
    A) Flowers  B) Ghosts  C) Corpses  D) Seeds

  7. What literary device is used in canto I?
    A) Alliteration  B) Personification  C) Simile  D) Onomatopoeia

  8. The season symbolized at the start is:
    A) Summer  B) Autumn  C) Winter  D) Spring

  9. “Dirge of the dying year” suggests:
    A) Celebration  B) Mourning  C) Awakening  D) Peace

  10. The wind’s dual nature:
    A) Harsh and cruel only  B) Calm and gentle only
    C) Weak and worn  D) Powerful and ambiguous


21–30: Cloud Imagery in Canto II

  1. What are compared to decaying leaves?
    A) Trees  B) Fields  C) Clouds  D) Seeds 

  2. The clouds act as:
    A) Cauldrons  B) Angels of rain and lightning  C) Blankets  D) Rivers 

  3. The “locks of the approaching storm” refer to:
    A) Roots  B) Clouds  C) Winds  D) Waves

  4. Chorus “hear, O hear!” at canto end is:
    A) A silence call  B) A plea to the wind
    C) A lullaby  D) A celebration

  5. What tone dominates canto II?
    A) Joyful  B) Confessional  C) Mournful  D) Romantic

  6. The sky is described as a:
    A) Sea of joy  B) Sepulchre  C) Mirror  D) Vault

  7. What 'sweeps' the sky and sea?
    A) Birds  B) Leaves  C) West Wind  D) Humans

  8. Which element is present here?
    A) Fire  B) Earth  C) Water  D) Metal

  9. The clouds are messengers of:
    A) Spring  B) Change  C) Decay  D) Calm

  10. The device “dirge of the dying year” is an example of:
    A) Personification  B) Metaphor  C) Alliteration  D) Hyperbole


31–40: Sea Imagery in Canto III

  1. Which sea is woken by the wind?
    A) Pacific  B) Indian  C) Mediterranean  D) Atlantic 

  2. What does the sea "see" in sleep?
    A) Shrubs  B) Old palaces and towers  C) Mountains  D) Clouds

  3. The sea imagery evokes:
    A) Desert  B) Memory and history  C) Joy  D) Irony

  4. What does the speaker identify with?
    A) Trees  B) Wave, leaf, cloud  C) Roots  D) Fire

  5. “Thorns of life” symbolize:
    A) Flowers  B) Pain, suffering  C) Freedom  D) Growth

  6. The poet’s desire:
    A) Silence  B) Union with the wind  C) Escape
    D) Forgetfulness

  7. “A heavy weight of hours...” refers to:
    A) Time as burden  B) Physical fatigue
    C) Decay  D) Noise

  8. This canto is primarily a:
    A) Dialogue  B) Prayer/confession  C) Mockery  D) Love poem

  9. Which element is absent?
    A) Air  B) Water  C) Earth  D) Fire 

  10. The structure shifts here to express:
    A) Anger  B) Longing and identification  C) Humor  D) Distance


41–50: Address to the Wind in Canto IV

  1. Focus shift occurs in canto:
    A) I  B) II  C) III  D) IV

  2. The wind is asked to "make me thy...":
    A) Voice  B) Lyre  C) Advocate  D) Warrior 

  3. What is "Drive my dead thoughts..." an example of?
    A) Symbolism  B) Metaphor
    C) Simile  D) Onomatopoeia 

  4. What does he wish to be scattered like seeds?
    A) Leaves  B) Dead thoughts  C) Ashes  D) Tears

  5. “If I were a dead leaf…” is an example of:
    A) Simile  B) Hypothetical wish  C) Irony

  6. The tone is one of:
    A) Joy  B) Desperation  C) Peace  D) Defiance

  7. His self-image is:
    A) Powerful  B) Worn out  C) Indifferent  D) Angry

  8. The address is an example of:
    A) Monologue  B) Dialogue  C) Apostrophe  D) Satire

  9. The emotional tone:
    A) Light  B) Sombre and reflective
    C) Comic  D) Energetic

  10. The appeal spans:
    A) 1 line  B) The entire section
    C) Ends with couplet  D) All canto IV


51–60: Empowerment in Canto V

  1. Canto V tone becomes:
    A) Passive  B) Assertive appeal  C) Mocking  D) Timid

  2. It opens with “O Wind, If Winter comes…” – showing:
    A) Fear  B) Optimism  C) Anger  D) Boredom

  3. What does “my spirit! Be thou me…” depict?
    A) Rejection  B) Union with wind
    C) Shunning nature  D) Confusion

  4. Shift to plural pronouns indicates:
    A) Isolation  B) Collective empowerment
    C) Reversion to self  D) Emotional retreat

  5. The missing element (fire) returns in this canto?
    A) Yes  B) No, still absent

  6. “Ashes and sparks” symbolize:
    A) Fire's return  B) Creativity and rebirth
    C) Physical warmth  D) Death

  7. The ending implies:
    A) Hopelessness  B) Renewal ahead
    C) Chaos  D) Finality

  8. The wind’s role:
    A) Destroyer only  B) Both destroyer and preserver
    C) Healer only  D) Silent force

  9. The speaker wants his:
    A) Body changed  B) Words spread
    C) Soul hidden  D) Thoughts erased

  10. The final tone is:
    A) Dark  B) Hopeful
    C) Vengeful  D) Conflicted


61–70: Literary Devices & Themes

  1. Which device opens the poem?
    A) Hyperbole  B) Alliteration (“wild West Wind”)  C) Irony

  2. The dominant device is:
    A) Simile  B) Personification  C) Metonymy

  3. The poem is an example of an:
    A) Elegy  B) Ode
    C) Sonnet  D) Ballad

  4. The tone evokes:
    A) Comedy  B) Sublime Romanticism
    C) Satire  D) Tragedy

  5. Poetic structure is:
    A) Blank verse  B) Terza rima  C) Free verse

  6. The wind acts as the poet’s:
    A) Enemy  B) Muse/Prophet
    C) Mentor  D) Child

  7. “Trumpet of prophecy” is metaphor for:
    A) Music  B) Poetic voice
    C) Military  D) Silence

  8. Central theme includes:
    A) Only death  B) Death and rejuvenation
    C) Love and loss

  9. The poem makes a political reference to:
    A) French Revolution  B) Peterloo massacre
    C) American Civil War

  10. The voice transitions from:
    A) Passive to active  B) Listening to commanding
    C) Weak to weaker


71–80: Critical Interpretation

  1. The “pestilence-stricken multitudes” refer to:
    A) Leaves  B) Leaves as societal decay
    C) Birds

  2. The Maenad reference:
    A) Joyful maid  B) Frenzy of storm
    C) Winter spirit

  3. The Mediterranean scene symbolizes:
    A) Desertion  B) Memory and historical decay

  4. “Clarion” in context means:
    A) Silence  B) Trumpet
    C) Drum

  5. The poem uses apostrophe by addressing:
    A) Self  B) Wind
    C) Nature

  6. The speaker views himself compared to wind as:
    A) Equal  B) Weak and suffering 

  7. The primary literary theme:
    A) Love  B) Transformation through nature

  8. The use of Greek myth (Maenad) adds:
    A) Humor  B) Ecstatic imagery

  9. The poet’s wish for the wind to be his:
    A) Enemy  B) Spirit/muse

  10. Overall theme encompasses:
    A) Stagnation  B) Change and poetic rebirth


81–90: Symbolism & Imagery Applications

  1. Leaves in the poem represent:
    A) Youth  B) Dead thoughts
    C) Wealth

  2. Clouds represent:
    A) Cleanliness  B) Messengers of change

  3. Sea symbolizes:
    A) Boredom  B) Subconscious memory

  4. Thorns symbolize:
    A) Growth  B) Pain

  5. Ashes and sparks symbolize:
    A) Fire's pain  B) Seeds of creativity

  6. The “lyre” symbolises:
    A) Music  B) The poet

  7. Spring symbolizes:
    A) Finality  B) Rebirth

  8. Winter symbolizes:
    A) Love  B) Hardships

  9. Wind as a prophet reflects:
    A) Political change  B) Artistic revolution

  10. Wind’s journey is:
    A) Still  B) Dynamic


91–100: Form, Meter & Final Reflections

  1. The poem is structured in:
    A) Quatrains  B) Terza rima tercets + couplet

  2. The ending suggests:
    A) Apocalypse  B) Cycle of renewal

  3. The tone is primarily:
    A) Calm  B) Passionate Romantic

  4. The meter underscores:
    A) Disorder  B) Measured power

  5. The poet’s role is:
    A) Observer  B) Prophet‑poet

  6. The lyric voice is:
    A) Ironic  B) Earnest

  7. The poem’s core message:
    A) Permanence  B) Change through poetry

  8. The final question line is:
    A) Serious only
    B) Rhetorical hope

  9. The ode’s style is:
    A) Colloquial  B) Formal and musical

  10. “Ode to the West Wind” is best described as a:
    A) Love letter  B) Revolutionary ode


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100 multiple-choice questions on “Ode to the West Wind” by Percy Bysshe Shelley

Here's a comprehensive set of 100 multiple-choice questions on “Ode to the West Wind” by Percy Bysshe Shelley , each with the correct a...