Bonus

The line “Happy is he who like [this man], has made a beautiful voyage” opens a sonnet from Joachim du Bellay’s The Regrets inspired by a disappointing trip to Rome. For 10 points each:
[10e] Louise Labé’s (“luh-BAY’s”) Sonnet I contrasts what “wise” figure with a speaker hopelessly in love? An Alfred, Lord Tennyson poem titled for him ends, “To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.”
ANSWER: Ulysses [or Odysseus; or Ulysse]
[10h] In the oft-quoted opening line of Labé’s Sonnet VIII, which adapts the oxymorons of Petrarch’s Sonnet 134, she states, “I live. I die.” followed by this pair of contradictory actions. Name both actions.
ANSWER: burn AND drown [or “I burn and drown”; or “I’m on fire and I drown”; or “je me brûle et me noie”]
[10m] Labé’s sonnets were likely for Olivier de Magny (“duh mahn-YEE”), a member of this poetic circle that revived the alexandrine. The poet of Sonnets for Helen, Pierre de Ronsard, led this group with a mythological name.
ANSWER: La Pléiade (“lah play-YAHD”) [or the Pleiades; or the Brigade]
<European Literature>
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Summary

TournamentExact Match?HeardPPBEasy %Medium %Hard %
2025 ACF NationalsYes2214.0996%46%0%