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Dorothy Parker and Robert Frost Quizzes
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The poem's speaker decided to take the well traveled road.
False
The traveler in "The Road Not Taken" comes to an intersection with three roads.
False
There is no consistent rhyme or meter in "The Road Not Taken".
False
In "The Road Not Taken," the outcome of the speaker's decision is ambiguous because we don't know if the decision was a good one or a bad one.
True
In "The Road Not Taken," an extended metaphor is used to make readers think about their choices in life.
True
The traveler in "The Road Not Taken" decides to try both roads, one at a time.
False
Robert Frost delivered a poem at John F. Kennedy's Inauguration.
True
Two poems in this module--"The Choice" and "The Road Not Taken"--address the heartbreak that results from poor decisions in matters of love and romance.
False
The speaker in the poem "The Choice" chooses money over love.
False
In the poem "The Choice," the speaker's true love offers gifts that are not material in nature.
True
One of the poem's metaphors compares a man's charm to a "lilting song."
True
"The Choice" conveys the theme that financial prosperity is a key to happiness.
False
"Houses of marble and billowing farms" is an example of alliteration in this poem.
False
Parker's poem is written in free verse.
False
The speaker in the poem "The Choice" chose someone who gave her love over someone who promised her wealth.
True