English Literature A: Unit 3: Specimen Question Paper
English Literature A: Unit 3: Specimen Question Paper
English Literature A: Unit 3: Specimen Question Paper
AS and A Level
English Literature A
Unit 3:
Specimen question paper
Version 1.1
General Certificate of Education
Advanced Level Examination
Specimen Paper
Instructions
• Use blue or black ink or ball point pen.
• Write the information required on the front of your answer book. The Examining Body for this paper
is AQA. The paper reference is LITA3.
• Answer both questions.
• Do all rough work in the answer book. Cross through any work you do not want to be marked.
Information
• Material from your wider reading may not be taken into the examination room.
• The maximum mark for this paper is 80.
• You will be marked on your ability to use good English, to organise information clearly and to use
specialist vocabulary where appropriate.
Advice
• This unit assess your understanding of the relationships between the different aspects of English
Literature.
LITA3
2
Please read this advice carefully before you turn to the material.
1 Reading
• Here are the materials taken from the prescribed area for study, Love Through the Ages.
You will be using this material to answer the two questions on the page opposite.
• Read all four pieces (A, B, C and D) and their introductions several times in the light of the
questions set. Your reading should be close and careful.
2 Wider Reading
• The questions test your wider reading in the prescribed area for study, Love Through the
Ages. In your answers, you should take every opportunity to refer to your wider reading.
3
1 Read the two poems (Extract A and B) carefully. They were written at different times by different
writers.
Basing your answer on the poems and, where appropriate, your wider reading in the poetry of love,
compare the ways the two poets have used poetic form, structure and language to express their
thoughts and ideas.
(40 marks)
2 Write a comparison of the ways Shakespeare and Hardy present the partings of people who love
each other.
• the ways the writers’ choices of form, structure and language shape your responses to these
extracts
• how your wider reading in the literature of love has contributed to your understanding and
interpretation of the extracts.
(40 marks)
END OF QUESTIONS
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THE READING
Extract A
The poet, Michael Drayton (1563 – 1631), became a page to Sir Henry Goodeere of Polesworth who
ensured that he was educated. He fell in love with Sir Henry’s daughter who provided the inspiration for
Idea, a sonnet sequence written in 1619. The following poem is taken from that sequence.
MICHAEL DRAYTON
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Extract B
Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892 – 1950) was an American lyrical poet and the first woman to receive the
Pulitzer Prize for poetry. She was also known for her unconventional bohemian lifestyle and for her
many love affairs with both men and women. She had a significant relationship with the poet, George
Dillon, for whom this and many other sonnets were written.
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Extract C
This extract is taken from the play Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616). Unknown
to their feuding families, Juliet and Romeo have married and spent the night together, but Romeo has
been banished from Verona because he killed a member of Juliet’s family. So they must part.
Extract D
This extract is taken from The Woodlanders (1887) written by Thomas Hardy (1840 – 1928). Melbury
had promised his daughter Grace to Giles Winterborne, but she rejects him and marries the new doctor.
A poor villager, Marty South, had always loved Giles but he did not reciprocate her feelings, although he
was kind to her. When the doctor was unfaithful, Grace turned to Giles who let her sleep in his house
during stormy weather. He slept outside, fell ill and died. In this extract, which is the end of the novel,
Grace’s father has discovered that she has returned to her husband.
Melbury now returned to the room, and the men having declared themselves refreshed they all
started on the homeward journey, which was by no means cheerless under the rays of the high moon.
Having to walk the whole distance they came by a footpath rather shorter than the highway, though
difficult except to those who knew the country well. This brought them by way of the church: and
passing the graveyard they observed as they talked a motionless figure standing by the gate.
‘I think it was Marty South,’ said the hollow-tuner parenthetically.
‘I think ‘twas; ‘a was always a lonely maid,’ said Upjohn. And they passed on homeward, and thought
of the matter no more.
It was Marty, as they had supposed. That evening had been the particular one of the week upon
which Grace and herself had been accustomed to privately deposit flowers on Giles’s grave, and this was
the first occasion since his death eight months earlier on which Grace had failed to keep her
appointment. Marty had waited in the road just outside Melbury’s, where her fellow-pilgrim had been
wont to join her, till she was weary; and at last, thinking that Grace had missed her, and gone on alone,
she followed the way to the church, but saw no Grace in front of her. It got later, and Marty continued
her walk till she reached the churchyard gate; but still no Grace. Yet her sense of comradeship would
not allow her to go on to the grave alone, and still thinking the delay had been unavoidable she stood
there with her little basket of flowers in her clasped hands, and her feet chilled by the damp ground, till
more than two hours had passed. She then heard the footsteps of Melbury’s men, who presently passed
on their return from the search. In the silence of the night Marty could not help hearing fragments of
their conversation, from which she acquired a general idea of what had occurred, and that Mrs Fitzpiers
was by that time in the arms of another man than Giles.
Immediately they had dropped down the hill she entered the churchyard, going to a secluded
corner behind the bushes where rose the unadorned stone that marked the last bed of Giles Winterborne.
As this solitary and silent girl stood there in the moonlight, a straight slim figure, clothed in a plaitless
gown, the contours of womanhood so undeveloped as to be scarcely perceptible in her, the marks of
poverty and toil effaced by the misty hour, she touched sublimity at points, and looked almost like a
being who had rejected with indifference the attribute of sex for the loftier quality of abstract humanism.
She stooped down and cleared away the withered flowers that Grace and herself had laid there the
previous week, and put her fresh ones in their place.
‘Now, my own, own love,’ she whispered, ‘you are mine, and only mine; for she has forgot ’ee at
last, although for her you died! But I – whenever I get up I’ll think of ’ee, and whenever I lie down I’ll
think of ’ee again. Whenever I plant the young larches I’ll think that none can plant as you planted; and
whenever I split a gad, and whenever I turn the cider wring, I’ll say none could do it like you. If ever I
forget your name let me forget home and heaven!......But no, no, my love, I never can forget ’ee; for you
was a good man, and did good things!’
END OF EXTRACTS
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