‘Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?’ by Shakespeare – Questions and Answers(M.C.Q.), Class 12, WBCHSE


1. ‘Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?’ is written by –

A) Keats B) Shakespeare C) G. Patel D) Rimbaud

Ans. B) Shakespeare

2. ‘Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day? is a/an –

A) ode B) elegy C) dramatic monologue D) sonnet

Ans. D) sonnet

3. “Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?” is Sonnet No. –

A) 18 B) 81 C) 16 D)28

Ans. A) 18

4. ‘Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?’ is a _________ poem. –

A) nature B) love C) philosophical D) devotional

Ans. B) love

5. In the sonnet ‘Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?’ the poet addresses –

A) his friend B) his mistress C) his wife D) his mother

Ans. A) his friend

6. Shakespeare celebrates in his sonnet ‘Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?’ –

A) the transitory of life B) the potency of nature C) the beauty of his friend D) none of these

Ans. C) the beauty of his friend

7. ‘Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?’ is an/a –

A) Horatian ode B) Petrarchan sonnet C) Shakespearean sonnet D) Spencerian sonnet

Ans. C) Shakespearean sonnet

8. The poem begins with –

A) a metaphor B) a simile C) a personification D) both interrogation and simile

Ans. D) both interrogation and simile

9. The winds that blow in summer in Shakespeare’s Sonnet No. 18 are –

A) balmy  B) weak  C) hot  D) rough [H.S. = 2016]

Ans. D) rough.

10. In summer ‘Rough winds’ do shake –

A) all trees B) all birds C) buds D) houses

Ans. C) buds

11. The ‘darling buds’ are shaken by rough winds in –

A) March B) April C) May D) June [H.S. = 2017 &2022]

Ans. C) May.

12. “Thou art more lovely and temperate”. Here the word ‘thou’ refers to –

A) the poet himself B) the poet’s lady love C) the poet’s mother D) the poet’s friend

Ans. D) the poet’s friend

13. Summer’s lease lasts –

A) short-lived B) for a decade C) long-lasting D) everlasting

Ans.  A) short-lived

14. The month referred to by the poet in the sonnet is –

A) May B) April C) January D) August

Ans. A) May

15. ‘The eye of heaven’ in Shakespeare’s Sonnet No. 18 refers to –

A) the sun  B) the moon  C) the poet  D) the clouds [H.S. = 2015]

Ans. A) the sun 

16. “….. his gold complexion dimmed.” Here ‘his’ refers to –

A) the sun  B) the sky C) the poet’s friend  D) the poet himself  [H.S. = 2019]

Ans. A) the sun.

17. The word ‘dimmed’ suggests that the sun –

A) has set B) has just risen C) has been covered by clouds D) none of these

Ans. C) has been covered by clouds

18. The poet thinks that the summer season is –

A) perfect B) long C) transitory D) very temperate

Ans. C) transitory

19. Nature’s changing course is –

A) dimmed  B) temperate C) untrimmed  D) lovely [H.S. = 2018 & 2022]

Ans. C) untrimmed.

20. The poet imagines that his friend possesses –

A) eternal summer B) no glory C) momentary happiness D) charm

Ans. A) eternal summer

21. The phrase ‘eternal summer’ suggests –

A) poet’s death B) youthfulness of poet’s friend C) talent of poet’s friend D) death of poet’s friend

Ans. B) youthfulness of poet’s friend

22. “But thy eternal summer shall not fade.” Here ‘thy’ refers to – 

A) Shakespeare B) the sun C) Shakespeare’s friend  D) the season of summer [H.S. = 2020]

Ans. D) Shakespeare’s friend.

23. “Nor shall death brag thou wand’rest in his shade”-The figure of speech used in the line is –

A) simile B) metaphor C) irony D) personification

Ans. D) personification

24. The friend of the poet will grow –

A) in his youth B) in the eternal lines of the sonnet C) in his own poetry D)in death

Ans. B) in the eternal lines of the sonnet

25.” When in eternal lines to time thou grow’st”-‘eternal lines’ implies –

A) the poetry B) the beauty of the young man C) the existence D) none of these

Ans. A) the poetry

26. “So long lives this…”-Here ‘this’ refers to the poet’s –

A) friend B) readers C) sonnet D) beloved wife

Ans. C) sonnet

27. “This gives life to thee.”-‘Life’ here suggests –

A) resurrection B) immortality C) youth D) friendly feelings

Ans. B) immortality

28. The sonnet ‘Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?’ is by tone –

A) optimistic B) stoical C) pessimistic D) comical

Ans. A) optimistic

29. Shakespeare belongs to _______________ period. –

A) Elizabethan B) Restoration C) Victorian D) Romantic

Ans. A) Elizabethan

30. Poet’s friend will live in this world –

A) as long as people read this sonnet  B) as long as men can breathe C) as long as eyes can see D) as long as ears can hear  

Ans. A) as long as people read this sonnet 

Read more about:

∎ ‘Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?’ by William Shakespeare – Questions and Answers(S.A.Q.), Class 12, WBCHSE

∎ ‘Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?’ by William Shakespeare – Questions and Answers(L.A.Q.), Class 12, WBCHSE


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