<p>I don't think we will ever know..</p>
<p>i don't remember a passage with blue and the sky...</p>
<p>blue...? never heard of it...at least on the test</p>
<p>gametheory, I had both Barrons and Kaplan and found Kaplan to be more useful. Barrons has A LOT more information, but half of it was superfluous and terms that you will never encounter.</p>
<p>Kaplan was concise, you can read through it in an hour and a half, and the practice tests were more accurate IMO (plus there were more of them.)</p>
<p>I never use PR so I wouldn't know.</p>
<p>And flam, I can't remember a blue passage...</p>
<p>but I know for sure that if you only did 50 questions, you skipped out a section because there are always 60-63 questions on the Literature Test...</p>
<p>hmmmm thanks for the replies guys...this is very interesting because i had a poem that was about the word blue...i think liek every 2 lines it started off with Blue...</p>
<p>Then for the questions, it asked what was the poem about, blah blah blah. It was like in the middle of the test.</p>
<p>Where did you guys take your test? I'm from California, anyone take it in California here?</p>
<p>oh and I recommend Kaplan. I only had time to read their lesson overview and found it helpful because it helped me answer the iambic pentameter question. If you have never taken Literature before like me, try the Kaplan book, it'll probably help more than Barron's. The Barron's for math only made me panic when I relaized I couldn't do half the stuff in there...turned out their material wasn't even on the Math11C</p>
<p>Lol, flam, sorry to break it to you...but the first poem in Kaplan's Practice Test one is an ode to the color blue</p>
<p>melancholydane or another lit balla, what did you say the effect of the narrator in the last passage was?</p>
<p>omg no wonder i think i got confused between the two tests...omg...</p>
<p>so for you guys...was your last passage the one about the music/rain?</p>
<p>I AM SO SCREWED I CANT BLEIEVE I SKIPPED ONE WHOLE SECTION!!! HAHA</p>
<p>don't worry.. if you aced everything else you have a 750:)</p>
<p>There was an answer about communicating Kid Chicago's thoughts and emotions. Since all he did in the passage was play drums and reflect (no speaking), this was the narrator's purpose.</p>
<p>hrmmmm, what about absolving his guilt? did the narrator ever mention what he did to make the girl mad and leave?</p>
<p>I said to make the reader more sympathetic to him...</p>
<p>I'd agree with the sympathetic one - there's nothing about guilt in the passage..</p>
<p>What was the answer to the Pygmalion/Galatea poem question with choices I II III about jealousy/Galatea's fame/other artists more talented?</p>
<p>i forgot what i put for that one....but it was the roman numerals one rite</p>
<p>i don't remember the choices but i know i put I and III</p>
<p>i definitely know it was I and II too..but forgot if i put the third one or not</p>
<p>Does anyone remember the question? Even just kinda. Or what the roman numerals were?</p>