1. Which of the following Poe stories begins with the words: “The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as I best could…”?
2. What Estonian composer used a style known as tintinnabulation, a word popularized in Poe's "The Bells"?
3. Whose beauty is “like those Nicean barks of yore That gently, o’er a perfumed sea, The weary, way-worn wanderer bore”?
4. What is the name of the woman who has been buried not quite dead in Poe’s “The Fall of the House of Usher”?
5. In “The Masque of the Red Death,” a figure appears at a ball dressed as the Red Death. What actual disease does this refer to?
6. Which of the following stories is the first to feature Poe’s amateur detective C. Auguste Dupin?
7. Which of Poe’s poetic loves was chilled and killed by a wind that came out of a cloud sent by envious angels?
8. Which of the following concerns a “rare and radiant maiden whom the angels name Lenore”?
9. What device does the phrase “the silken, sad, uncertain rustling” show?
10. In which story does the narrator lose his cool and confess to the police that he has just killed an old man?