Packet 1: Bonus 10

The speaker remarks that “Security is loud” in contrast to one of these objects that “[shows] her Garnet Tooth.” For 10 points each:
[10h] Name this sort of object which “basks and purrs” in one poem. The speaker hopes “some loving Antiquary” will cry the name of one of these objects “To the Hills return!” in a poem titled “I have never seen” these objects.
ANSWER: volcanoes [accept “When Etna basks and purrs”; accept “I have never seen ‘Volcanoes’ —”]
[10e] This poet of “When Etna basks and purrs” and “I have never seen ‘Volcanoes’ —” is the subject of Adrienne Rich’s essay “Vesuvius at Home,” which describes visiting her house in Amherst, Massachusetts.
ANSWER: Emily Dickinson
[10m] In this Dickinson poem, the “cordial light” from the speaker’s smile is likened to a “Vesuvian face.” This poem ends by declaring “For I have but the power to kill, / Without - the power to die -.”
ANSWER: My Life had stood - a Loaded Gun
<TC, American Literature> | NAFTA-Packet-1

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