Exact phrase required. A book titled for this two-word phrase describes an author’s perception of John Locke as a symbol of “evil, superstition, and tyranny,” and elucidated his mythology to argue that he was not mad. For 10 points each:
[10m] Give this two-word phrase. One poem’s first stanza asks “what immortal hand or eye / could frame thy [this two-word phrase]?”
ANSWER: fearful symmetry
[10h] Fearful Symmetry is an analysis by this Canadian thinker who divided fiction into modes and proposed five levels of symbolism in his 1957 book Anatomy of Criticism.
ANSWER: Northrop Frye
[10e] Frye’s Fearful Symmetry is an analysis of this English poet of Songs of Innocence and Experience.
ANSWER: William Blake
<Ganon Evans, Literature - British - Poetry> ~20111~ <Editor: Jaimie Carlson>