Student Name: *Student ID: *1.The reader can infer that “the tidings” in line 2 were news ofthe creature’s escape into the Alpsa confession that the narrator had been the creator of the creaturethe tale of Elizabeth’s murder by the creaturethe information that the narrator’s father and Ernest were alivea report of the narrator’s decline and despair2.The sentence which begins in line 6 (“Cursed . . .”) serves toimply that legal action will be pursuedagainst the creatureportray death itself as a cursesuggest that Frankenstein bears someresponsibility for the deathreveal Frankenstein’s views about deathcommunicate a moral judgment regardingmurder3.Lines 10-16 reveal that the narrator hadtemporarily been confined in an insane asylum following the death of his fatherbeen imprisoned for killing Elizabeth and attempting to blame it on the creatureonly dreamed that Elizabeth and his father were deadno memory or awareness of what occurred after the creature killed Elizabethwandered in the wilds and hallucinated for months after his father’s death4.Which of the following is NOT an irony presented in lines 17-23?the narrator awakening to reason and revenge simultaneouslythe narrator seeing the creature as the cause of the misery rather than himself who created the creaturethe creature being seen as the destroyer of its creatorboth cursing and praying about the creature at the same timethe narrator wanting to destroy what he himself had created5.As used in line 33, “wonderful” is best understood to meanawe-inspiringjoyfulawesomeincrediblesuperb6.The extent to which Frankenstein is determined to pursue his goal is best established by means ofeuphemismunderstatementan analogyan oxymorona declaration7.The narrator’s tone in lines 69-70 could best be described as one ofsanctimonious sarcasmraging despairhaughty coldnessjudgmental reticencesupercilious anger8.Which of the following from the passage most reflects the narrator’s self-serving nature?“I required . . . murderer” (lines27-28)“the miserable . . . destruction” (line 20)“My manner . . . calm” (lines 34-35)“He had . . . returned” (lines 46-48)“My rage . . . exists” (lines 59-60)