1994 - JAMB Literature Past Questions and Answers - page 5
"Stream of consciousness" is the name for
"Love blurs your vision; but after it recedes,you
can see more clearly than ever. It's like the tide
going out revealing whatever has been thrown away
and sunk; broken bottles, old gloves,rusting
pop-cans, nibbled fish bodies, bones.The ruin
you've made."
Margaret Atwood, Cat's Eye<br />
The passage above claims that when "love recedes", you
"But everything does have a beginning, and so if I
am to tell this story I must begin. Yet i do not know
the starting point of my tale."
Based on Nawal El Saadaw's The Circling Song,the speaker of the above statement is the
"The fair breeze blew, the white foam flew
The furrow followed free
We were the first that ever burst
Into that silent sea."
Based on Coleridge's 'The Rime of the Ancient Mariner', the dominant figure of speech in the above lines is
"The poet needs to be up at night,when the world
sleeps...needs to exist in places where spiders
forge their webs in silence;near the gutters where
the underside of our dreams fester."
Based on Ben Okri's 'Of Poets and their Antagonists', the poet in the passage above is
"Here lies our sovereign Lord the King,
Whose word no man relies on,
Who never said a foolish thing
Nor ever did a wise one,"
Based on John Wilmot Rochester's Epitaph on King Charles 11, the form of the above stanza is an example of
"Full fathom five thy father lies
Of his bones are corals made
Those are pearls that were his eyes
Nothing of him that doth fade."
The rhyme scheme of the above stanza is
"In the cold hand of death...
his mouth was cotton filled, his man-pike
shrunk to a sub-soil grub
his head was hallowed and his brain
on scales-was this a trick to prove
fore-knowledge after death?"
Based on Wole Soyinka's '' Post Mortem, one of the techniques employed by this poet is the use of
"Marjorie turns to the fish, They swim slickly
backwards and forwards in the bright heaven of
their tanks:'white gravel,silver bubbles,green weed and the iridescence of their scales.They
cheer her. How much more beautiful fish are than
people, she thinks for the thousandth time.No
ungainliness,no filth;no stupidity."
Based on Lesley Glaister's "Serrusalmus", New Writing, in the passage above, the fish are better than people because they are
"He considers also a little fragile,because artistic:
I need to be cared for, like a potted plant. A little
pruning, a little watering, a little weeding and
straightening up to bring out the best in me."
Based on Margaret Atwood, Cat's Eye, the "me" in the above passage is seen as