&vsize=400&exid=1&exmo=0&exty=5&thre=1&trmo=0&trurl=http://62.232.76.134/Campus/Britcoun/Script/Script.cfm&shuf=0&spdrag=1&sppos=60&skelt=../obj/skelt01.swf&frameup=cnt_txt1.swf&framedown=tpl_truefalse.swf&panel=0&audiolv=70&audiofile=nul&autoplay=0&buffertime=5&tscr=0&audioscript=HTML text&subm=1&hurl=helpfile.swf&cnt_txt=Below are 10 statements about the poem. For each one, decide if it is True or False. You can get help by clicking on the blue buttons next to the answers and selecting 'Hint'. When you have finished, click "Submit" to check your answers.&opt2=False&opt1=True&nitem=10&i10_hint=O mystic Nile! Thy secret yields
Before us; thy most ancient dreams
Are mixed with far Canadian fields&i10_dvalue=0&i10_cvalue=2&i10_txt=The Nile flows through Canadian fields.&i9_hint=And some Canadian lips are dumb
Beneath Egyptian sands.&i9_dvalue=0&i9_cvalue=1&i9_txt=Some Canadians died in Egypt.&i8_hint=On soft Pacific slopes, -- beside
Strange floods that northward rave and fall, --
Where chafes Acadia's chainless tide --
Thy sons await thy call.&i8_dvalue=0&i8_cvalue=2&i8_txt=Near the Pacific ocean sons are waiting for strange floods.&i7_hint=Whose was the danger, whose the day,
From whose triumphant throats the cheers,
At Chrysler's Farm, at Chateauguay&i7_dvalue=0&i7_cvalue=1&i7_txt=The author believes that Canadians should be happy about what happened at Chrysler's Farm and Chateauguay.&i6_hint=At Queenston, and at Lundy's Lane:
On whose scant ranks but iron front
The battle broke in vain!&i6_dvalue=0&i6_cvalue=2&i6_txt=The soldiers at Queenston and Lundy's Lane were very vain.&i5_hint=Quebec, thy storied citadel
Attest in burning song and psalm
How here thy heroes fell!&i5_dvalue=0&i5_cvalue=1&i5_txt=Brave men died in a battle in Quebec.&i4_hint=O Falterer, let thy past convince
Thy future&i4_dvalue=0&i4_cvalue=1&i4_txt=The author encourages those who hesitate to be influenced by events in the past.&i3_hint=I see to every wind unfurled
The flag that bears the Maple-Wreath;
Thy swift keels furrow round the world&i3_dvalue=0&i3_cvalue=1&i3_txt=The author imagines Canadian ships sailing the seas of the world.&i2_hint=How long the ignoble sloth, how long
The trust in greatness not thine own?&i2_dvalue=0&i2_cvalue=1&i2_txt=The author thinks that Canadians trusted to the rule of foreigners for too long.&i1_hint="O Child of Nations"&i1_dvalue=0&i1_cvalue=2&i1_txt=Canada had been a nation for a long time when the poem was written.&