2026 WAEC LITERATURE IN ENGLISH 3 (DRAMA AND POETRY) ANSWERS
2026 WAEC LIT-IN-ENGLISH (OBJ) OBJECTIVE ANSWERS:
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2026 WAEC LITERATURE IN ENGLISH (PROSE & DRAMA) ANSWERS:
2026 WAEC LITERATURE IN ENGLISH (POETRY) ANSWERS:
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2026 WAEC Literature in English – Prose, Drama & Poetry Answers
Prepare effectively for your 2025/2026 WAEC Literature in English exams with early access to Objective and Essay Answers for Prose, Drama, and Poetry. Early subscription ensures you get answers on time and are thoroughly prepared for your exams.
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Sample Answers – Prose
1. Conflict in Second Class Citizen (Adah & Francis)
In Second Class Citizen, the conflict between Adah and Francis highlights a marriage rooted in self-interest rather than mutual respect.
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Adah’s Struggle:
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Works hard to support her family financially.
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Dreams of marrying a wealthy man to help her mother and brother.
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Faces societal pressures in her Ibuza community, where marriage is often patriarchal and restrictive.
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Francis’s Behavior:
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Takes advantage of Adah’s earnings without contributing.
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Neglects family duties and resists Adah’s ambitions.
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Sees women as inferior and dismisses Adah’s career goals.
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Outcome:
Adah ultimately becomes the sole provider for their children, showing resilience, independence, and determination.
2. Nii’s Rejection of Linda (Unexpected Joy at Dawn)
Nii’s encounter with Linda demonstrates loyalty, moral integrity, and ingenuity:
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Linda tries to manipulate him with sexual favors to obtain a British visa.
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Nii, loyal to his sick wife, resists temptation.
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He cleverly escapes by pretending to be intoxicated, ensuring his integrity remains intact.
Lesson:
The narrative emphasizes ethics, loyalty, and the importance of principled decision-making even in difficult circumstances.
3. The Epilogue of Invisible Man (Ralph Ellison)
The epilogue reflects the narrator’s journey toward self-awareness and identity:
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Realizes he has been living according to others’ expectations.
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Struggles to interpret his grandfather’s advice while confronting societal blindness through encounters with Mr. Norton.
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Leaves underground isolation to reclaim his identity and confront society.
Themes:
Identity, invisibility, resilience, and social recognition.
4. Blindness as a Metaphor in Invisible Man
Blindness symbolizes societal indifference and denial of black individuality:
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Narrator’s identity is consistently ignored by society.
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Experiences at Liberty Paint Plant and within the Brotherhood highlight exploitation.
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Tod Clifton’s fate underscores societal neglect of those challenging norms.
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The narrator’s underground retreat and eventual emergence reflect self-reflection, resistance, and self-assertion.
Conclusion:
Blindness in the novel underscores the struggle for recognition, identity, and justice in a society that refuses to acknowledge individuality.


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