Mr and Mrs Birling feel relieved shortly after Inspector Goole leaves their home. Which of the following events is responsible for their change of mood?
0%
Sheila has informed her parents that they cannot be held responsible for a suicide
0%
Gerald returns from his walk with news
0%
The Birlings have decided to take full responsibility for their mistreatment of Eva Smith and feel less guilty in consequence
0%
The Inspector rings to tell the family that he was mistaken
Q.2.
How is Sheila responsible for Eva Smith's fate?
0%
Sheila demanded that the young woman be sacked from Milwards
0%
Sheila refused to recommend the young woman to her mother's charity committee
0%
Sheila introduced the young woman to Gerald
0%
Sheila encouraged her father to sack the young woman from her job at his works
Q.3.
How does Mr Birling try to dismiss the Inspector?
0%
He refuses to cooperate
0%
He immediately phones the local police
0%
He orders the Inspector to leave
0%
He implies that his connections with the Chief Constable mean that he is above whatever the Inspector might be investigating
Q.4.
Why are Sheila and Eric angry with their parents' reaction?
0%
Mr and Mrs Birling seem to have forgotten their role in Eva Smith's death
0%
Their parents are more worried about scandal than about how their actions affect others
0%
Mr and Mrs Birling show no signs that their behaviour will change in future
0%
All of the above
Q.5.
Which of the following indicates that the Birlings have not finished so easily with the fate of "Eva Smith"?
0%
The telephone rings
0%
The police call at the door
0%
Inspector Goole reappears
0%
Eric storms out of the house to meet with the real Eva
Q.6.
What are the Birling family celebrating at the beginning of the play?
0%
The recent launch of the Titanic
0%
Mr Birling's knighthood
0%
The engagement of Gerald and Sheila
0%
Mrs Birling's new job
Q.7.
Eric says he met Eva Smith when he was a "bit squiffy". What does he mean by this?
0%
He was lonely
0%
He was smelly
0%
He was drunk
0%
He was tired
Q.8.
Gerald's former mistress was called Daisy Renton. How is he involved in the fate of Eva Smith?
0%
Eva Smith and Daisy Renton are the same person, as Gerald realises when he sees the photograph
0%
He kept a woman called Daisy Renton as a mistress, but abandoned her as Eva Smith has been abandoned
0%
Eva Smith and Daisy Renton are not the same women, therefore Gerald bears no responsibility for Eva's fate
0%
Eva Smith and Daisy Renton were flatmates
Q.9.
Why is the Inspector's name "Goole" significant?
0%
It's merely a northern name
0%
It is a foreign name
0%
It is a homophone for "ghoul"
0%
It is not significant
Q.10.
Why is the absence of the Croft family from these celebrations significant?
0%
Their absence hints at a disapproval of Sheila and her family
0%
Their absence shows that they neglect their business
0%
Their absence indicates their involvement in the Inspector's visit
0%
Their absence shows their lack of patriotism
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