What action does the bird initially perform?
What does the bird do before drinking dew from a blade of grass?
What does the bird do with its eyes while looking around?
How does the bird respond to the narrator's offer of a crumb?
What comparison does Dickinson make to describe the bird's eyes?
What literary device is employed in the line “A Bird Came Down the Walk”?
Which theme is central to "A Bird Came Down the Walk"?
Which word best describes the tone of the poem "A Bird Came Down the Walk"?
The bird’s arrival and actions in the poem suggest it is:
What technique can be found in the, “Banks of Noon”
How does Dickinson personify the bird in the poem?
With the progress of the poem, the attitude of the narrator towards the bird:
How are the bird's actions described in the poem?
The phrases "raw" and "unrolled" in the context of the poem signify:
The bird's reaction to the narrator's crumb indicates:
What does the bird do at the end of the poem?
The simile comparing the bird's flight to a “butterfly’s” most effectively illustrates:
What kind of imagery is prominent throughout "A Bird Came Down the Walk"?
What does the bird’s “velvet head” symbolise in the poem?
How does the poet feel about the bird she observes?
In the line, “he drank a Dew,” why does the poet modify an uncountable noun with an article?
The poem's progression from observation to interaction highlights:
What does the bird's rapid glances suggest about its state of mind?
What does the line, “hopped sidewise to the Wall,” indicate about the character of the bird?
Emily Dickinson's use of detailed natural imagery emphasises:
The flight of the bird figuratively indicates:
What does Dickinson use to create a vivid picture of the bird?
The phrase “Oars divide the Ocean” metaphorically describes:
What does the bird symbolise in the poem?
Dickinson’s poem “A Bird Came Down the Walk” primarily explores: