LIT-2300 Intro to Literature - Exam 3 - Master Set

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Dr. Hodgin

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130 Terms

1
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The Lake Isle of Innisfree

William Butler Yeats

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Those Winter Sundays

Robert Hayden

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Sir Patrick Spence

Anonymous

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Out, Out—

Robert Frost

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My Last Duchess

Robert Browning

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My Papa’s Waltz

Theodore Roethke

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The Author to Her Book

Anne Bradstreet

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To a Locomotive in Winter

Walt Whitman

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like to see it lap the Miles

Emily Dickinson

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Speech to the Young. Speech to the Progress-Toward

Gwendolyn Brooks

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Hate Poem

Julie Sheehan

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The Golf Links

Sarah N. GleghomT

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The Chimney Sweeper

William Blake

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How do I love thee, let me count the ways

Elizabeth Barrett Browning

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Batter my heart, three-personed God, for You

John Donne

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Aftermath

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

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Bread

Samuel Menashe

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Grass

Carl Sandburg

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London

William Blake

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The Bean Eaters

Gwendolyn Brooks

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Tears, Idle Tears

Alfred, Lord Tennyson

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Love Calls Us to the Things of This World

Richard Wilbur

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the mother

Gwendolyn Brooks

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The House that Built Me

Allen Shamblin and Tom Douglas

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My Life had stood - a Loaded Gun

Emily Dickinson

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O Captain! My Captain!

Walt Whitman

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Humble and Kind

Lori McKenna

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The splendor falls on castle walls

Alfred, Lord Tennyson

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Redemption

George Herbert

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The Road Not Taken

Robert Frost

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Verse

It refers to any single line of poetry or any composition written in separate lines of more or less regular rhythm, in contrast to prose

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Paraphrase

The restatement in one’s own words of what one understands a poem to say or suggest.

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Summary

A brief condensation of the main idea or plot of a work.

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Subject

The main topic of a work, whatever the work is “about”.

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Theme

A generally recurring subject or idea noticeably evident in a literary work. Not all subjects in a work can be considered this.

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Lyric Poem

A short poem expressing the thoughts and feelings of a single speaker. Often written in first person, it traditionally has a song-like immediacy and emotional force.

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Narrative Poem

A poem that tells a story. Ballads and epics are two common forms of this poetry.

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Dramatic Poem

A poem written as a speech made by a character at some decisive moment. The speaker is usually addressing a silent listener.

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Didactic Poem

A poem intended to teach a moral lesson or impart a body of knowledge.

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Tone

The mood or manner of expression in a literary work, which conveys an attitude toward the work’s subject, which may be playful, sarcastic, ironic, sad, solemn, or any other possible attitude.

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Satiric Poetry

Poetry that blends criticism with humor to convey a message, usually through the use of irony and a tone of detached amusement, withering contempt, and implied superiority.

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Persona

Latin for “mask”, a fictitious character created by an author to be the speaker of a literary work.

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Irony

In language, a discrepancy between what is said and what is meant. In life, a discrepancy between what is expected and what occurs.

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Sarcasm

A style of bitter irony intended to hurt or mock its target.

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Diction

Word choice or vocabulary.

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Concrete Diction

Words that specifically name or describe things or persons.

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Abstract Diction

Words that express general ideas or concepts.

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Poetic Diction

Strictly speaking, poetic diction means any language deemed suitable for verse, but the term generally refers to elevated language intended for poetry rather than common use.

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Allusion

A brief, sometimes indirect, reference in a text to a person, place, or thing. They imply a common body of knowledge between the reader and writer and act as a literary shorthand to enrich the meaning of a text.

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Denotation

The literal, dictionary meaning of a word.

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Connotation

An association or additional meaning that a word, image, or phrase may carry, apart from its literal denotation or dictionary definition. A word may pick up these from the uses to which it has been put in the past.

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Image

A word or series of words that refers to any sensory experience (usually sight, although also sound, smell, touch, or taste. An image is a direct or literal recreation of a physical experience and adds immediacy to literary language.

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Imagery

The collective set of images in a poem or other literary work.

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Simile

A comparison of two things, indicated by some connective, usually like, as, or than, or a verb such as resembles. A simile usually compares two things that initially seem unlike but are shown to have a significant resemblance.

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Metaphor

A statement that one thing is something else, which, in a literal sense, it is not.

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Personification

The endowing of a thing, an animal, or an abstract term with human characteristics.

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Apostrophe

A direct address to someone or something. A speaker may address an inanimate object, a dead or absent person, an abstract thing, or a spirit.

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Overstatement

Also called hyperbole. Exaggeration used to emphasize a point.

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Understatement

An ironic figure of speech that deliberately describes something in a way that is less than the case.

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Paradox

A statement that at first strikes one as self-contradictory, but that on reflection reveals some deeper sense.

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Pun

A play on words often used for comedic effect

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Stanza

From the Italian, meaning “stopping-place” or “room”. A recurring pattern of two or more lines of verse, poetry’s equivalent to the paragraph.

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Rhyme Scheme

Any recurrent pattern of rhyme within an individual poem.

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Refrain

A word, phrase, line, or stanza repeated at intervals in a song or poem.

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Ballad

Traditionally, a song that tells a story.

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Alliteration

The repetition of a consonant sound in a line of verse or prose. It can be used at the beginning of words, or internally on stressed syllables.

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Assonance

The repetition of two or more vowel sounds in successive words, which creates a kind of rhyme.

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Cacophony

A harsh, discordant sound often mirroring the meaning of the context in which it is used.

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Euphony

The harmonious effect when the sounds of the words connect with the meaning in a way pleasing to the ear and mind.

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Onomatopoeia

An attempt to represent a thing or action by a word that imitates the sound associated with it.

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The longing for inner peace and spiritual renewal through nature.

The Lake Isle of Innisfree

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Loyalty and obedience can lead to tragic consequences when authority is misguided.

Sir Patrick Spence

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Human life is fragile and the world remains indifferent to individual suffering.

Out, Out—

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Love expressed through sacrifice and duty is often unrecognized until later.

Those Winter Sundays

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The destructive consequences of jealousy, pride, and the desire to control others.

My Last Duchess

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The complicated blend of affection and fear within family relationships.

My Papa’s Waltz

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Creative work feels deeply personal and flawed, revealing the vulnerability of artists.

The Author to Her Book

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Industrial progress is both powerful and beautiful, symbolizing the strength of modernity.

To a Locomotive in Winter

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Technology’s presence in the natural world is awe-inspiring and transformative.

I like to see it lap the Miles

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Hope, perseverance, and living in the present sustain us through adversity.

Speech to the Young, Speech to the Progress-Toward

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Intense emotions can overwhelm logic, revealing the absurdity of exaggerated hatred.

Hate Poem

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Social inequality allows the privileged to enjoy leisure while the vulnerable labor.

The Golf Links

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Innocence is exploited by society, yet children cling to hope and faith

The Chimney Sweeper

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True love is profound, spiritual, and enduring beyond death.

How Do I Love Thee?

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Spiritual transformation requires surrender and divine intervention.

Batter my heart, three-person’d God

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Life’s later seasons involve harvesting what is imperfect, mixed, and marked by decline.

Aftermath

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Work done with devotion becomes an act of love that nourishes both body and spirit.

Bread

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Time erases the signs of war, and humanity forgets its own violent history.

Grass

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Oppression, corruption, and suffering are rooted in society’s institutions and human behavior

London

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Aging, poverty, and memory shape a quiet but meaningful life.

The Bean Eaters

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Nostalgia reveals both beauty and sorrow in remembering what is lost forever.

Tears, Idle Tears

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Human life requires embracing earthly duties despite yearning for spiritual purity.

Love Calls Us to the Things of This World

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Abortion leaves lasting emotional scars of guilt, love, and grief.

The Mother

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Returning to one’s roots can bring healing, identity, and emotional restoration.

The House That Built Me

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Power without autonomy can be both fulfilling and dangerous.

My Life had stood—A Loaded Gun

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The death of a beloved leader transforms triumph into grief.

O Captain! My Captain!

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Life’s success should be guided by integrity, kindness, and humility.

Humble and Kind

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Beauty, sound, and memory echo endlessly, creating emotional resonance across time.

The Splendor Falls on Castle Walls

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True forgiveness and renewal are found not in high places but through Christlike sacrifice.

Redemption

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Our life choices define us, even when their meaning is shaped by later reflection.

The Road Not Taken