Langston Hughes Quiz 26 (20 MCQs)

Quiz Instructions

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1. Language:There is no rhyme in the poem. Come, Let us roam the night togetherSinging. I love you. AcrossThe Harlem roof-topsMoon is shining.Night sky is blue.Stars are great dropsOf golden dew. Down the streetA band is playing. I love you. Come, Let us roam the night togetherSinging.
2. In what city was the Renaissance that Langston Hughes was a part of?
3. What is the author's tone throughout the poem?
4. How many poems did Langston Hughes write?
5. Affect:The tone of the poem is ..... (How does the author feel or want you to feel when you read the poem?) Come, Let us roam the night togetherSinging. I love you. AcrossThe Harlem roof-topsMoon is shining.Night sky is blue.Stars are great dropsOf golden dew. Down the streetA band is playing. I love you. Come, Let us roam the night togetherSinging.
6. What can you infer about Roger from this exchange with Mrs. Jones: "Your face is dirty. I got a great mind to wash your face for you. Ain't nobody home to tell you to wash your face?" "No'm, " said the boy.
7. What does the kitchen symbolize in the poem?
8. What is the speaker's attitude towards his deferred dream in the poem 'Dreams Deferred'?
9. Compare line 24 of "A Voice" with line 3 of "Words Like Freedom." How are these lines similar?
10. What does the speaker see when looking at the world?
11. The main conflict that Hughes is challenging is:
12. How tall was Langston Hughes?
13. Based on the following passage, what can you infer about Mrs. Jones? "" I have done things, too, which I would not tell you, son-neither tell God, if he didn't already know." '
14. Arcie was
15. Where does the speaker suggest that dreams come from?
16. Compared to the first poem, the tone of the second poem "Dreams" is more
17. Which sentence is the best summary of who Langston Hughes was?
18. How old is the narrator?
19. Semaj ..... a scheme to steal the "Mona Lisa" painting from the art museum.
20. Frederick Douglass was a known abolitionist. What is an abolitionist?