Allegory': Poetic Devices and Literary Terminology
Allegory': Poetic Devices and Literary Terminology
Allegory': Poetic Devices and Literary Terminology
Allegory`
When several symbols work together in a narrative to create a separate level of meaning. A
story or narrative, like a fable, in which a moral principle or abstract truth is presented by
means of fictional characters.
Alliteration
The repetition of similar initial consonant sounds. The repetition of consonant sounds,
particularly at the beginning of words.
Allusion
A brief, indirect reference to a historical or literary person, event or object. The writer
assumes that the reader will recognize the reference and superimpose the ideas and
meaning associated with it into the current context.
Antithesis
Apostrophe
Assonance
The repetition of similar stressed vowel sounds. The repetition of similar vowel sounds.
Similarity of sounds; particularly, as distinguished from rhyme, the similarity of like vowels
followed by unlike consonants.
Ballad Stanza
A 4-line stanza of which the first and third lines are iambic tetrameter and the second and
fourth lines are iambic trimeter, the second and fourth lines rhyming. The meter of the ballad
stanza, called also common meter, is often varied in practice (ex. Coleridge's Rime of the
Ancient Mariner).
Ballade
A traditional French verse-form consisting of three stanzas and a concluding envoy. In its
original form, a refrain at the end of each stanza states the main theme of the poem. This
"envoy" is usually addressed to the poet's patron, or a member of the court. The entire poem
usually contains only three rhymes, with the rhyme scheme consistent in each stanza. A
poem commonly of three 8-line stanzas with all stanzas following the rhyme-scheme
ababbcbc, concluded by a four-line envoy rhyming bcbc. Chaucer wrote ballades, as did
some late-19th century poets.
Cacophony
Consonance
Dramatic Monologue
A lyric poem in which the speaker addresses a silent but identifiable listener. There is
generally a specific physical setting and a dramatic situation to which the speaker is
responding. Dramatic monologues are similar to the soliloquy in effect. The purpose of both
is to enable readers to learn more about the speaker's thoughts and feelings, and as such
they are an excellent vehicle for character revelation. A type of poem perfected by Robert
Browning that consists of single speaker talking to one or more unseen listeners and often
revealing more about the speaker than he or she seems to intend.
Elegy
A poem whose purpose is to express grief or sorrow. The theme is usually death. A poem of
lament, praise, and consolation, usually formal and sustained, over the death of a particular
person; also, a meditative poem in plaintive or sorrowful mood.
Elision
The omission of an unstressed vowel or syllable to preserve the meter of a line of poetry. The
running together of vowels in adjacent words, for the sake of eliminating a syllable.
Enjambment
Occurs when the sense of a poetic line runs over to the succeeding line. The running of one
line into another. Lines not enjambed are end-stopped.
Envoy
A stanza, usually of 4 or 5 lines, concluding a ballade, a sestina, or some other such form;
normally interlaced with the foregoing stanzas by its rhyme-scheme.
Epic
A long narrative poem that records the adventures of a hero. Epics typically chronicle the
origins of a civilization and embody its central values. Examples from western literature
include Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, Virgil's Aeneid, and Milton's Paradise Lost.
Epigram
A brief, pithy statement that is often antithetical. Appears in prose as well as poetry.
Euphemism
The use of inoffensive, mild, or vague words in place of harsher, more blunt ones. Often used
to reduce the risk of offending someone. "We are experiencing heavy casualties" (many
soldiers are being killed).
Euphony
The musical effect achieved when a poet uses words and phrases that create pleasant,
harmonious sounds and rhythms.
Foot
A group of two or three syllables constituting the unit of a metrical line. Normally, in English,
an iamb, trochee, anapest or dactyl.
Free verse
Poetry that contains no structured form or rhyme scheme, and does not follow a standard
metrical pattern.
Found poetry
A piece of prose selected and arranged to look like poetry. Snatches from other people's
work collected into a poem. A poem created from prose found in a non-poetic context, such
as advertising copy, brochures, newspapers, product labels, etc. The lines are arbitrarily
rearranged into a form patterned on the rhythm and appearance of poetry.
Haiku
A Japanese poem in three lines, of 5, 7, and 5 syllables, which represents a clear picture so
as to at once to arouse emotion and suggest spiritual insight.
Hyperbole
"I've told you a billion times to put the cap back on the toothpaste tube!"
Imagery
Irony
Consists of a discrepancy between expectation and reality.
A contradiction of expectation between what is said and what is meant (verbal irony) or what
is expected in a particular circumstance or behaviour (situational), or when a character
speaks in ignorance of a situation known to the audience or other characters (situational).
Verbal irony
Situational irony
Contains an inconsistency between what one would expect to happen and what
does happen.
Dramatic irony
Involves a discrepancy between what a character says and what the author
means.
Limerick
A light or humorous verse form of five chiefly anapaestic verses of which lines one, two and
five are of three feet and lines three and four are of two feet, with a rhyme scheme of aabba.
Litotes
Occurs when something is understated by stating the negative of its opposite. A figure of
speech in which an assertion is made by the negation of its opposite.
"She was not disappointed by the news" instead of, "She was thrilled by the news."
Poetry which focuses on a single, unified experience and expresses a powerful emotion or
sentiment.
Madrigal
A brief lyric, averaging eight or ten lines, suitable for part singing. Popular in Elizabethan
England. (ex. Fletcher's "Take, O, Take those Lips Away.")
Meiosis
Metaphor
Comparison between essentially unlike things without using words OR application of a name
or description to something to which it is not literally applicable
"[Love] is an ever fixed mark, / that looks on tempests and is never shaken."
Metonymy
The use of a closely related term to represent an object with which it is associated. It is often
used interchangeably with synecdoche in which a part of an object is used to refer to the
whole object.
A figure of speech involving the substitution of one noun for another of which it is an attribute
or which is closely associated with it, e.g., "the kettle boils" or "he drank the cup." Metonymy
is very similar to synecdoche.
The crown referring to a monarch: "We have always remained loyal to the crown."
Metre
All language is naturally rhythmic. Poets will sometimes manipulate this random rhythm by
arranging their words in such a way so that the accented and unaccented syllables of the
words conform to a regular pattern. When this occurs and the pattern is measurable, it is
called a metre. Metre is described in terms of the number and type of metrical "feet" in each
line. A metrical foot is the basic unit of rhythm. Measured pattern of rhythmic accents in a line
of verse. (ex. Iambic Pentameter, Trochaic Tetrameter, Iambic Tetrameter, Anapoestic
Tetrameter)
Narrative poetry
Poetry which tells a story, and can contain many of the same elements as narrative prose.
Onomatopoeia
The use of a word that closely resembles the sound to which it refers; the use of words to
imitate the sounds they describe
Oxymoron
"Led Zeppelin"
"Iron Butterfly"
Paradox
A statement that reads as being contradictory, but upon closer examination reveals some
truth. A situation or phrase that appears to be contradictory but which contains a truth worth
considering.
"He that findeth his life shall lose it: and he that loseth his life for My sake shall find it."
Personification
A special form of metaphor in which human characteristics are attributed to animals,
inanimate objects, or ideas. The endowment of inanimate objects or abstract concepts with
animate or living qualities
Pun
Play on words OR a humorous use of a single word or sound with two or more implied
meanings.
Refrain
Rhyme
A repetition of similar vowel sounds followed by similar consonant sounds, results in rhyme.
To determine the kind of rhyme being used, count the number of syllables that sound similar.
If the last syllable is stressed and rhymes, it is a masculine rhyme, otherwise known as a
single rhyme. If two syllables rhyme and the second syllable is unstressed, it is a feminine
rhyme, otherwise known as double rhyme. If three syllables rhyme, this is a triple rhyme.
Correspondence of terminal sounds of words or of lines of verse.
Simile
A direct comparison using the words "like" or "as" between two unlike things. "My mistress'
eyes are nothing like the sun"
Sonnet
A fourteen line poem in iambic pentameter with a prescribed rhyme scheme; its subject is
traditionally that of love.
Stanza
Unit of a poem often repeated in the same form throughout a poem; a unit of poetic lines
("verse paragraph")
Symbol
The use of a concrete object as both a literal and a metaphorical representation of something
else. An object or action that stands for something beyond itself (ex. white = innocence,
purity, hope)
Synecdoche
A figure of speech in which a part is substituted for the whole. Same as metonymy.
Referring to a concept by a part of it.
"Lend me a hand."