Home ยป Past Questions ยป Literature-in-english ยป Jamb ยป 1983 ยป Page 3
43
From the novel; The Trials of Brother Jero

Soyinka’s main concern in The Trials of Brother Jero is to

  • A. expose the corrupt politicians in the society
  • B. expose the religious charlatans in the society
  • C. expose women power to seduction
  • D. coderm men who beat their wives
  • E. show the significant of religion in our lives.
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44
From the novel; The Trials of Brother Jero

The hero of The Trials of Brother Jero is

  • A. Amope
  • B. the Old Prophet
  • C. the politician
  • D. Brother Chume
  • E. Brother Jero
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45
From the novel; The Trials of Brother Jero

Amope was introduced as a character into The Trials OF Brother Jero primarily to dramatize the

  • A. tragedy of unfaithful wives
  • B. near realization of the curse hanging on brother Jero
  • C. disadvantage of marrying an uneducated woman
  • D. evils of street trading by women
  • E. evil nature of women in general.
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46
From the novel; The Trials of Brother Jero

Most of the information in the Trial of Brother Jero is conveyed when Brother Jero speaks to himself in dramatic monologues otherwise known as a

  • A. stream of consciousness technique
  • B. personal conversation
  • C. dialogue
  • D. narration
  • E. soliloquy.
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47
From the novel; Julius Ceasar

There is a tide in the affairs of man
Which, taken at the flood, lead on to fortune;
Omitted, all the voyage of their life
Is bound in shadows, and miseries.
This is a statement made by

  • A. Antonu, urging Caesar to take the crown
  • B. Cassius, urging Brutus to join the struggle to remove Caesar before he grows into tyrant
  • C. Brutus, urging that Cassius and himself lead out their forces to meet those of Antony and Octavius at Philippi
  • D. Casca, urging that the conspirators explain their cause to the populace before their motives are misunderstood
  • E. Messala, urging Titinius to search for Pindarus.
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48
From the novel; Julius Ceasar

‘Night hangs upon mine eyes; my bones would rest, that have but laboured to attain this hour’.

Brutus’ words in the above lines come

  • A. after the conclution of the plan to kill caesar
  • B. soon after his wife's insisted to know the object of his unusual brooding
  • C. as part of his famous address to his fellow Romans
  • D. during a brief meeting between him and Cassius on how to counter the forces of Octavius and Antony
  • E. after his defeat by the forces of Octavius and Antony.
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49
From the novel; Julius Ceasar

‘O Julius Caesar!art mighty yet!
Thy spirit walks abroad and turns our swords.
In our own proper entrails’.
These lines were spoken by

  • A. Cassius before the corpse of Brutus
  • B. Cassius before the corpse of Caesar
  • C. Brutus before the corpse Cassius
  • D. Titinius before the corpse Cato
  • E. Brutus before the corpse Portia.
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50
From the novel; Julius Ceasar

Marcus Antonius roused the public to mutiny in his funeral speech in Julius Ceasar partly because he succeeded in discrediting Brutus ans Cassius by calling them ‘honorable men’, when in fact he consciously organized his speech to prove that they were dishonorable. This device is known as

  • A. allegory
  • B. hyperbole
  • C. irony
  • D. 'O Julius Caesar! thou art might yet!
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