The quiz questions are annoying. I am fairly sure I answer all of them correct and it says I am wrong, then I roll back and try again over and over, and now I have no idea what is correct anymore. I am fairly sure romanticism has nothing to do with romantic stories, but now I am doubting myself, maybe romanticism is just romantic stories. I end up knowing less than I did before I started playing.
Everything is written in the library.
f lin_lit_r == 1:
mc 2 "So, the topics I need to begin with are the 14th century up to the 19th: the Renaissance, Classicism, Enlightenment, Romanticism."
mc 2 "... then romanticism was born in Germany..."
mc 2 "... a vivid example of the Enlightenment literature is Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels..."
mc 2 "... the 17th century is the century of the birth of classicism..."
mc 2 "... The Renaissance began in Florence, Italy, in the 14th century..."
elif lin_lit_r == 2:
mc 2 "... George Byron was born on January 22, 1788 and died on April 19, 1824..."
mc 2 "... a new literary hero has acquired a strong sensual characteristics..."
mc 2 "... the unity of nature and human feelings was a characteristic feature of Romantic literature..."
mc 2 "... Romanticism was born at the end of the 18th century, after which realism came to replace it..."
elif lin_lit_r == 3:
mc 2 "... Mary Ann Evans was published under the pseudonym of George Eliot..."
mc 2 "... the next day, after Byron published Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage, he woke up famous..."
mc 2 "... In 1847, Charlotte Bronte published his Jane Eyre..."
mc 2 "... The Pickwick Club Notes became a turning point in Charles Dickens writing career..."
mc 2 "... Mann wrote mostly in t0he intellectual (philosophical) style..."
elif lin_lit_r == 4:
mc 2 "... Scrooge, the protagonist of the Christmas Carol..."
mc 2 "... interest in strong, passionate personalities in an era of realism faded away..."
mc 2 "... In 1836, Dickens began to publish the \"Pickwick Club Death Notes\"..."
mc 2 "... after a trip to the US, Dickens wrote \"Martin Chezlwit\"..."
mc 2 "... modernism gave way to postmodernism..."