Absurdist Drama
Play that depicts life as meaningless, senseless, uncertain. For
example, an absurdist playwright's story generally ends up where it
started; nothing has been accomplished and nothing gained. The
characters may be uncertain of time and place, and they are virtually
the same at the end of the play as they were at the beginning. Here is
how the genre came about: A group of dramatists in 1940's Paris believed
life is without apparent meaning
or purpose; it is, in short, absurd, as French playwright and novelist
Albert Camus (1913-1960) wrote in a 1942 essay, "The Myth of Sisyphus."
Parodoxically, the only certainty in life is uncertainty, the absurdists believed. For more about absurdist drama, see Waiting for Godot.
Act One of the main divisions of a play. Shakespeare's plays each have five acts. Each act is subdivided into scenes. An act generally focuses on one major aspect of the plot or theme. Between acts, stagehands may change scenery, and the setting may shift to another locale.
Adage
Wise saying; proverb; short, memorable saying that expresses a truth
and is handed down from one generation to the next; short saying that
expresses an observation or experience about life; maxim; aphorism;
apothegm. Examples of adages are the following:
Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.u0096Unknown author, 16th Century.
Birds of a feather flock together [probably based on an observation of Robert Burton (1577-1640) in The Anatomy of Melancholy: "Birds of a feather will gather together."] A great dowry is a bed full of brambles.u0096George Herbert, Outlandish Proverbs, 1640. Fish and visitors smell in three days.u0096Benjamin Franklin. One tongue is enough for a woman.u0096J. Ray, English Proverbs (1670). A friend in need is a friend indeed.u0096Of Latin origin. A barber learns to shave by shaving fools.u0096J. Ray, English Proverbs (1670).
Alarum
Stage direction in a Shakespeare play (or a play by another author in
Shakespeare's time) indicating the coming of a battle; a call to arms.
Alexandrine
Verse form popularized in France in which each line contains twelve
syllables (and sometimes thirteen). Major accents occur on the sixth and
twelfth syllables; two minor accents occur, one before the sixth
syllable and one before the twelfth syllable. A pause (caesura) occurs immediately after the sixth syllable. Generally, there is no enjambment in the French Alexandrine line. However, enjambment does occur in English translations of Alexandrine verse. The name Alexandrine derives from a twelfth-century work about Alexander the Great that was written in this verse format. Jean Baptiste Racine was one of the masters of this format. Some English writers later adapted the format in their poetry.
Allegory
Literary work in which characters, events, objects, and ideas have
secondary or symbolic meanings. One of the most popular allegories of
the twentieth century was George Orwell's Animal Farm,
about farm animals vying for power. On the surface, it is an
entertaining story that even children can enjoy. Beneath the surface, it
is the story of ruthless Soviet totalitarianism. Other famous examples
of allegories are John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress and the fifteenth-century morality play, Everyman.
Alliteration Repetition of consonant sounds. Examples: (1) But now I am cabined, cribbed, confined, bound into saucy doubts and fears.u0096Shakespeare. (2) Duncan is in his grave; after life's fitful fever he sleeps wellu0096Shakespeare. (3) When I was one-and- twentyu0096A.E. Housman. (Note that "one" has a "w" sound. (4) I sent thee late a rosy wreathu0096Ben Jonson. (Note that "wr" has an "r" sound.)
Allusion Reference to a historical event or to a mythical or literary figure. Examples: (1) Sir Lancelot fought with Herculean strength. (Reference to the mythological hero Hercules). (2) "I have met my Waterloo,"
the mountain climber said after returning from a failed attempt to
conquer Everest. (Reference to the Belgian town where Napoleon lost a
make-or-break battle). (3) Since my elementary-school days, math has
always been my Achilles heel. (Reference to the weak spot of Achilles, the greatest warrior to fight in the Trojan War.
When his mother submersed him in the River Styx after he was born, the
magical waters made him invulnerable. His flesh was impervious to all
harmu0096except for the heel of a foot. His mother was grasping the heel
when she dipped him into the river. Because the river water did not
touch his heel, it was the only part of his body that could suffer harm.
He died when a poison-tipped arrow lodged in his heel. Hence, writers
over the ages have used the term Achilles heel to refer to a person's most pronounced weakness.
Anachronism:
A thing from a different period of history than that which is under
discussion; a thing that is out of place historically. Suppose, for
example, that a literary work about World War I says that a wounded soldier
is treated with penicillin to prevent a bacterial infection. The writer
of the work would deserve criticism for committing an anachronism, for
penicillin and other antibiotics did not come into use until 1941,
twenty-three years after the end of World War I.
Anadiplosis
(an uh dih PLOH sis) Figure of speech in which a word or phrase at the
end of a sentence, clause, or line of verse is repeated at or near the
beginning of the next sentence, clause, or line of verse. Here are
examples:
The peasant pledged the country his loyalty; loyalty was his only possession.
. My conscience hath a thousand several tongues, And every tonguebrings in a several tale, And every talecondemns me for a villain.u0096Shakespeare, Richard III.
Anagnorisis
(an ag NOR ih sis) In Greek drama, a startling discovery; moment of
epiphany; time of revelation when a character discovers his true
identity. In the Sophocles play Oedipus Rex, anagnorisis occurs when Oedipus realizes who he is.
Analogue: Literary work, film, character, setting, etc. that resembles another literary work, film, character, setting, etc. The film West Side Story is an analogue of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Stephen Spielberg's film Jaws is an analogue of Herman Melville's novel Moby Dick.
Anapest and Anapestic See Meter .
Anaphora (uh NAF uh ruh) Repetition of a word, phrase, or clause at the beginning of word groups occurring one after the other. Examples: (1) Give me wine, give me women and give me song. (2) For everything there is a season . . . a time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up what is planted.u0096Bible, Ecclesiastes. (3) To die, to sleep; to sleep: perchance to dream.u0096Shakespeare, Hamlet. One of the most famous examples of anaphora in Shakespeare occurs in Act II, Scene I, Lines 40-68.
Anastrophe(uh NAS truh fe) Inversion of the normal word order, as in a man forgotten (instead of a forgotten man) or as in the opening lines of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's "Kubla Kahn": In Xanada did Kubla Kahn / A stately pleasure dome decree (instead of In Xanadu, Kubla Kahn decreed a stately pleasure dome). Here is another example, made up to demonstrate the inverted word order of anastrophe:
In the garden green and dewy
A rose I plucked for Huey
Anecdote A little story, often amusing, inserted in an essay or a speech to help reinforce the thesis.
Annotation Explanatory note that accompanies text; footnote; comment.
Antagonist
Character in a story or poem who opposes the main character
(protagonist). Sometimes the antagonist is an animal, an idea, or a
thing. Examples of such antagonists might include illness, oppression,
or the serpent in the biblical story of Adam and Eve.
Antonomasia (an tihn uh MAY zha) Identification of a person by an appropriate substituted phrase, such as her majesty for a queen or the Bard of Avon for Shakespeare.
Antiphrasis (an TIF ruh sis) See Irony, Definition 1.
Antithesis Placement of contrasting or opposing words, phrases, clauses, or sentences side by side. Following are examples:
I am tall; you are short.
The world will little note nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here.u0096Abraham Lincoln, "Gettysburg Address." To err is human, to forgive divine.u0096Alexander Pope, "Essay on Criticism."
Aphorism
Short, often witty statement presenting an observation or a universal
truth; an adage. Examples: (1) Fish and visitors smell in three
daysu0096Benjamin Franklin. (2) Many hands make light work.u0096John
Heywood. (3) In charity there is no excessu0096Francis Bacon. (4) Uneasy
lies the head that wears the crownu0096William Shakespeare. (See also Epigram.)
Apostrophe
Addressing an abstraction or a thing, present or absent; addressing an
absent entity or person; addressing a deceased person. Examples: (1)
Frailty, thy name is woman.u0096William Shakespeare. (2) Hail, Holy
Light, offspring of heaven firstborn!u0096John Milton. (3) God in
heaven, please help me.
Apprenticeship Novel (Bildungsroman) Novel that centers on the period in which a young person grows up. This type of novel was pioneered by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832) in his novel Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre (Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship). An apprenticeship novel can also be identified by its German name, bildungsroman, meaning novel (roman) of educational development (bildungs).
Archetype
(1) Original model or models for persons appearing later in history or
characters appearing later in literature; (2) the original model or
models for places, things, or ideas appearing later in history or
literature; (3) a primordial object, substance, or cycle of nature that
always symbolizes or represents the same positive or negative qualities.
Explanation of Definition 1:
The mythical Hercules is an original model of a strong man.
Consequently, he is an archetype. Exceptionally strong men who appear
later in history or literature are said to be archetypical Hercules
figures because they resemble the original Hercules. Similarly, the
biblical Eve is an original model of a woman who tempts a man to commit
sin. Thus, she is an archetype. Temptresses who appear later in history
or literature are said to be archetypical Eve figures because they
resemble the original Eve. Examples of archetypical Eve figures include
the housewife who goads her husband to steal from his employer and the
prostitute who tempts a married man to have illicit sex. In
Shakespeareu0092s play Macbeth, Lady Macbeth is an archetypical
Eve figure because she, like Eve, urges her husband to commit sinu0096in
the case of Macbeth, to commit murder. In Shakespeareu0092s Julius
Caesar, Brutus is an archetypical Judas (the apostle who betrayed
Christ) because Brutus betrays Caesar.
Explanation of Definition 2:
The biblical Sodom and Gomorrah, as well as Babylon, are original
examples of cities corrupted by sin. Thus, they are archetypes. Decadent
citiesu0096or cities perceived to be decadentu0096that appear later in
history or literature are said to be archetypical sin cities. Hollywood
and Las Vegas are examples.
Explanation of Definition 3:
Rivers, sunlight, serpents, the color red and green, and winter are
examples of primordial things (existing since the beginning of time)
that are archetypes because they always symbolize the same positive or
negative qualities, according to Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung
(1875-1961). Rivers represent the passage of time or life; sunlight
represents happiness, a new beginning, glory, truth, goodness, or God;
the color red represents passion, anger, blood, or war; the color green
represents new life, a new beginning, or hope; winter represents death,
dormancy, or atrophy.
Arras Tapestry hung on the stage to conceal scenery until the right moment. In Shakespeare's Hamlet,
an arras played a crucial role. Polonius hid behind one to eavesdrop on
a conversation between Hamlet and his mother, Queen Gertrude. When
Hamlet saw the tapestry move, he stabbed at it, thinking King Claudius
was behind it, and killed Polonius.
Arthurian Romance Literary work in which a knight in the age of the legendary King Arthur goes on a quest.
Aside
Words an actor speaks to the audience which other actors on the stage
cannot hear. Sometimes the actor cups his mouth toward the audience or
turns away from the other actors. An aside serves to reveal a
character's thoughts or concerns to the audience without revealing them
to other characters in a play. Near the end of Hamlet, Queen
Gertrude raises a cup of wine to her lips during the fencing match
between Hamlet and Laertes. King Claudius had poisoned the wine and
intended it for Hamlet. In an aside, Claudiusu0096unwilling to warn
Gertrude in an effort to preserve his innocenceu0096says, "It is the
poison'd cup: it is too late."
Assonance
Repetition of vowel sounds preceded and followed by different consonant
sounds. Use of "bite" and "like" in a line of poetry would constitute
assonance. Examples: (1) There are no tricks in plain and simple faith.u0096Shakespeare. (2) But I am pigeon-livered, and lack gall to make oppression bitter. (3) John met his fate by the lake.
Asyndeton Use of words or phrases in a series without connectives such as and or so.
Examples (1) One cause, one country, one heart.u0096Daniel Webster. (2)
Veni, vidi, vici (Latin: I came, I saw, I conquered).u0096Julius
Caesar.
Attica
Peninsula in southeastern Greece that included Athens. According to
legend, the King of Athens, Theseus, unified 12 states in Attica into a
single state dominated by Athenian leadership and the Athenian dialect
of the Greek language. The adjective Attic has long been
associated with the culture, language and art of Athens. The great
period of Greek drama, between the Sixth and Fourth Centuries, B.C., is
known as the Attic Period. Drama itself was invented by an Attic actor, Thespis, who introduced speaking parts to accompany choral odes.
Aubade
[oh BAHD] Joyful song about dawn and its beauty; morning serenade. One
of the finest aubades in literature occurs in Act II, Scene III, of
Shakespeare's play Cymbeline. It begins with the the famous words "Hark, hark! the lark at heaven's gate sings" (Line 22).
Ballad, Folk
Poem that tells a story that centers on a theme popular with the common
people of a particular culture or place. Generally of unknown
authorship, a folk ballad passes by word of mouth from one generation to
the next. One of its key characteristics is a candence that makes the
poem easy to set to mustic and sing.
Ballad, Literary
Ballad that imitates a folk ballad. But unlike the folk ballad, the
literary ballad has a known author who composes the poem with careful
deliberation according to sophisticated conventions. Like the folk
ballad, it tells a story with a popular theme.
Ballade
Lyric poem of French origin usually made up of three eight-line stanzas
and a concluding four-line stanza called an envoi that offers parting
advice or a summation. At the end of each stanza is a refrain. Each line
of the poem contains about eight syllables. The rhyme scheme of the
eight-line stanza is ababbcbc. The rhyme scheme of the envoi is bcbc."Ballade des dames du temps jadis" is an excellent example of the genre.
Bard Originally, a Celtic poet who sang epic poems while playing a harp. In time, bard was used to refer to any poet. Today, it is often used to refer to William Shakespeare (the Bard of Avon).
Beast Fable See Fable.
Bildungsroman: See Apprenticeship Novel.
Bombast Inflated, pretentious speech or writing that sounds important but is generally balderdash.
Breton Lay
Fourteenth Century English narrative poem in rhyme about courtly love.
The poem contains elements of the supernatural. The English borrowed the
Breton-lay format from storytellers in Brittany, France. A lay is a
medieval narrative poem originally intended to be sung. Breton is an adjective describing anyone or anything from Brittany. "The Franklin's Tale," a story in Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, is an example of a Breton lay.
Burlesque
Literary work, film, or stage production that mocks a person, a place, a
thing, or an idea by using wit, irony, hyperbole, sarcasm, and/or
understatement. For example, a burlesque may turn a supposedly
distinguished person into a buffoon or a supposedly lofty subject into a
trivial one. A hallmark of burlesque is its thoroughgoing exaggeration,
often to the point of the absurd. Cervantes used burlesque in Don Quixote to poke fun at chivalry and other outdated romantic ideals. Among English writers who used burlesque were Samuel Butler (Hudibras) and John Gay (The Beggaru0092s Opera). Burlesque is a close kin of parody. The latter usually ridicules a specific literary work or artistic production.
Caesura Pause in a line of verse shown in scansion by two vertical lines ( || ).
Canon
Complete works of an author. When reasonable doubt exists that an
author wrote a work attributed to him, scholars generally exclude it
from the authoru0092s canon. Such doubt sometimes arises when a
centuries-old worku0096for example, a play, poem, or novelu0096has
survived intact to the present day without an authoru0092s byline or
other documentation proving that a particular author wrote it.
Canto Major division division of an epic poem, such as Dante's Divine Comedy. The word is derived from the Latin cantus (song).
Caricature
Literary work or cartoon that exaggerates the physical features, dress,
or mannerisms of an individual or derides the ideas and actions of an
organization, institution, movement, etc. The word is derived from the
Italian caricare, meaning load, exaggerate, surcharge, fill to excess. In literature, caricature is a form of burlesque.
Carpe Diem Latin expression meaning seize the day. Literary works with a carpe diem
theme tell readers to enjoy life while they can. In other words, they
should eat, drink and be merry and not worry about dying. Sir John
Falstaff, the fun-loving and hard-drinking knight in Shakespeare's Henry IV Part I, Henry IV Part II, and The Merry Wives of Windsor believed in carpe diem. An example of a poem with a carpe diem theme is Andrew Marvell's "To His Coy Mistress."
Catalexis See Meter.
Catastasis Climax of a stage play.
Catastrophe (1) Denouement, or conclusion, of a stage tragedy; (2) denouement of any literary work.
Catchword
In published Shakespeare plays in earlier times, a single word on the
bottom of the right side of every page. This word was the first word
appearing on the next page.
Catharsis
In literature and art, a purification of emotions. The Greek
philosopher Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) used the term to describe the
effect on the audience of a tragedy acted out on a theater stage. This
effect consists in cleansing the audience of disturbing emotions, such
as fear and pity, thereby releasing tension. This purgation occurs as a
result of either of the following reactions: (1) Audience members
resolve to avoid conflicts of the main characteru0096for example,
Oedipus in Oedipus Rex and Creon in Antigoneu0096that
arouse fear or pity or (2) audience members transfer their own pity and
fear to the main character, thereby emptying themselves of these
disquieting emotions. In either case, the audience members leave the
theater as better persons intellectually, morally, or socially. They
have either been cleansed of fear of pity or have vowed to avoid
situations that arouse fear and pity. In modern usage, catharsis may
refer to any experience, real or imagined, that purges a person of
negative emotions.
Chalmys In the drama of ancient Greece, sleeveless outer garment, or cloak, worn by some actors.
Chantey (pronounced SHAN te; alternate spellings: chantey, shantey, shanty)
In earlier times, a song sung by sailors that kept time with the work
they were doing, such as tugging on a rope to hoist a sail. The length
of chanteys varied in relation to the length of the tasks being
performed.
Character, Flat Character in story who has only one prominent trait, such as greed or cruelty.
Character, Round
Character in a story who has many aspects to his or her personality.
The character may have a good side and a bad side; he or she may be
unpredictable.
Character, Static Character in a literary work who does not change his or her outlook in response to events taking place.
Chivalric Romance
Tale of courtly love. In such tales, nights exhibit nobility, courage,
and respect for their ladies fair, and the ladies exhibit elegance,
modesty, and fidelity. Although knights and ladies may fall passionately
in love, they eschew immoral behavior. In conflicts between good and
evil, justice prevails. Geoffrey Chaucer's "The Knight's Tale," the
first story in The Canterbury Tales, is an example of a chivalric romance.
Chiasmus (pronounced ki AZ mis) Words in a second clause or phrase that invert or transpose the order of the first clause or phrase. Here are examples:
I come from the rural north, from the urban south comes she.
John is a good worker, and a bright student is Mary. A fop their passion, but their prize a sot.u0096Alexander Pope. Flowers are lovely, love is flowerlikeu0096Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
Chorus (Greek Play) Bystanders in a Greek play who present odes on the action. A parode (or parados) is a song sung by the chorus when it enters. A stasimon
is a song sung during the play, between episodes of action. The chorus
generally had the following roles in the plays of Sophocles and other
Greek playwrights: (1) to explain the action, (2) to interpret the
action in relation to the law of the state and the law of the Olympian
gods, (3) to foreshadow the future, (4) to serve as an actor in the
play, (5) too sing and/or dance, and (6) to give the author's views.
In some ways, the chorus is like the narrator of a modern film or like
the background music accompanying the action of the film. In addition,
it is like text on the film screen that provides background information
or identifies the time and place of the action.
Chronicler [KRON ih kler]: recorder of medieval events; historian
Chronique Scandaleuse [kron EEK skan duH LOOZ]: Literary work centering on gossip and intrigue at the court of a king.
Classicism
In literature, a tradition espousing the ideals of ancient Greece and
Rome: objectivity, emotional restraint, systematic thinking, simplicity,
clarity, universality, dignity, acceptance of established social
standards, promotion of the general welfare, and strict adherence to
formal rules of composition. A classical writer typically restrained his
emotions and his ego while writing in clear, dignified language; he
also presented stories in carefully structured plots. Classicism
remained a guiding force in literature down through the ages. Writers in
the 15th,
16th
and 17th centuries, as well as the first half of the 18th Century,
highly esteemed classical ideals. In the mid-18th Century, writers began
to rebel against classical ideals in what came to be known as the
Romantic Movement, or romanticism,
which advocated emotional freedom, imaginative thinking, and
individuality in writing. However, neither classical nor romantic
writing was always entirely faithfully to its ideals. For example, a
classical writer may have exhibited emotional effusion from time to time
or expressed himself with language less than dignified; conversely, a
romantic writer may have exhibited emotional restraint and cool
objectivity on occasion. Writers today continue to use many of the
principles of both the classical and romantic schools of writing.
Clich Overused expression. Examples: raining cats and dogs, snug as a bug in a rug, chills running up and down my spine, warm as toast, short and sweet. Writers should avoid using clichs whenever possible.
Climax High point in a story. In Hamlet,
this point occurs when Hamlet and Laertes duel with swords and mortally
wound each other. In classic detective stories, this point usually
occurs when Sherlock Holmes, Charlie Chan, Hercules Poirot, etc., lay
out the evidence and finger the killer.
Closet Drama A drama written to be read rather than acted on a stage. An example is Samson Agonistes, by John Milton, a 1671 tragedy about the final days of the biblical hero Samson.
Comedy
(Stage) Play with a happy ending. The stage comedies in ancient and
Renaissance times did not always contain humor, the staple of the modern
stage and film comedy, but they did end happily. By contrast, a stage tragedy always ends unhappily.
Comedy of Manners Comedy that
ridicules the manners (way of life, social customs, etc.) of the
privileged and fashionable segment of society. An example is Oliver
Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer,
in which Goldsmith pokes fun at the English upper class. The play uses
farce (including many mix-ups) to ridicule the class-consciousness of
18th Century Englishmen.
Coming-of-Age Novel See Apprenticeship novel.
Concrete Poetry Poetry with lines arranged to resemble a familiar object, such as a Christmas tree. Concrete poetry is also called shaped verse.
Conflict
The struggle in a work of literature. This struggle may be between one
person and another person or between a person and an animal, an idea or a
thing. It may also be between a person and himself or herself (internal
conflict). In Shakespeare's Hamlet, the conflict is manifold.
Hamlet struggles against the villain Claudius, against the unbecoming
conduct of his mother, and against his conscience and indecision.
Conte Philosophique Philosophical novel or philosophical story, a genre Voltaire is credited with inventing. His contes philosophiques (which include Micromgas and Zadig)
are characterized by a u0093swift-moving adventure story in which
characterization [counts] for little and the moral (or sometimes
immoral) lesson for muchu0094 (Brumfitt, J.H. Voltaire: Candide. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 1968, Page 9.)
Coronach Funeral song (dirge) in Scotland and Ireland. In addition to being sung, it was sometimes played on bagpipes.
Cothurni.(singular, cothurnus): Boots worn by actors in ancient Greece to increase their height and, thus, visibility to theater audiences. Singular: cothurnus.
Couplet Two successive lines of poetry with end rhyme.
Coup de Thtre
(pronounced KOO duh tay AH truh) (1) Startling development in a drama
that is unforeseen and unmotivated; (2) a cheap plot development
intended solely to create a sensation.
Couplet, Heroic Two successive end-rhyming lines in iambic pentameter. Following is an example:
What dire offence from am'rous causes springs,
What mighty contests rise from trivial things (Lines 1 and 2, The Rape of the Lock, by Alexander Pope)
Dactyl and Dactylic See Meter.
Denouement
The outcome or resolution of the plot, occurring after the climax. In a
murder mystery, the denouement may outline the clues that led to the
capture of a murderer. In a drama about family discord, it may depict
the reconciliation of family members after a period of
estrangmentu0096or the permanent dissolution of family ties if the drama
reaches a climax in which the discord worsens.
Deus Ex Machina See Machine.
Deuteragonist In Greek drama, the character second in importance to the main character, or protagonist.
Dialogue
Conversation in a play, short story, or novel. A literary work on a
single topic presented in the form of a conversation. Plato's Republic, Symposium, and Phaedo are examples of literary works that are dialogues.
Diction
Word choice; the quality of the sound of a speaker or singer. Good
diction means that a writer pleases the eye of a reader or the ear of a
listener.
Didactic Adjective describing a literary work intended to teach a lesson or a moral principle.
Dimeter See Meter.
Dionysia, Greater See Dionysus.
Dionysia, Rural See Dionysus.
Dionysus
Patron god of Greek drama; god of wine and vegetation. Dionysus, called
Bacchus by the Romans, was the son of Zeus and one of the most
important of the Greek gods. Dionysus died each winter and was reborn
each spring, a cycle his Greek devotees identified with the death and
rebirth of nature. He thus symbolized renewal and rejuvenation, and each
spring the Greeks celebrated his resurrection with ceremonies that
eventually included drama contests. The most prestigious of these
festivals was the Greater Dionysia, held in Athens for five days and
participated in by playwrights such as Sophocles, Aeschylus,
Aristophanes, and Euripides. Festivals held in villages and small towns
were called the Rural Dionysia.
Dithyramb In the drama of ancient Greece, a choral hymn that praised Dionysus, god of wine and revelry, and sometimes told a story. In his great workPoetics,
Aristotle wrote that dithyrambs inspired the development of Greek
tragic plays, such as those of Sophocles. The first "play" supposedly
took place in the 6th Century B.C. when Thespis, a member of a chorus,
took the part of a character in a dithyramb. The action shifted back and
forth between him and the chorus. See also Thespian.
Doggerel Trivial or bad poetry.
Domesday Book
[DOOMS day book] official census of the English people and their
possessions, notably land, which was completed in 1086 at the behest of
King William I (William the Conqueror).
Doppelgnger(pronounced DOP l gayng er) In
folklore, the spirit double of a living person. Among well-known
writers who have used doppelgngers in their works are Fyodor Dostoevski
and E.T.A. Hoffman. A doppelgnger is not the same as a ghost; the latter
is an apparition of a dead person.
Drama
Literary work with dialogue written in verse and/or prose and spoken by
actors playing characters experiencing conflict and tension. The
English word drama comes from the Greek word "dran," meaning "to do."
Dramatic Irony
Failure of a character to see or understand what is obvious to the
audience. The most notable example of dramatic irony in all of
literature occurs in Oedipux Rex, by Sophocles, when Oedipus fails to realize what the audience knowsu0096that he married his own mother.
Dramatic Monologue:
Poem that presents a moment in which a narrator/speaker discusses a
topic and, in so doing, reveals his feelings and state of mind to a
listener or the reader. Only the speaker, talksu0096hence the term monologue, meaning "single (mono) discourse (logue)."
During his discourse, the speaker intentionally and unintentionally
reveals information about himself. The main focus of a dramatic
monologue is this personal information, not the speaker's topic. A
dramatic monologue is a type of character study. Perhaps the most famous
dramatic monologue in English literature is Robert Browning's "My Last Duchess."
Dramatis Personae
List of the characters in a play. Such a list is found at the beginning
of each Shakespeare play, as well as the plays of other dramatists.
Dumb Show
Part of play performed in gestures, without speech; pantomime. In
Shakespeare's plays, "dumb show" appears as a stage direction.
Edition and Issue:
Terms describing published versions of newspapers and magazines. A
newspaper printed on a specific date, such as August 22, is an issue.
However, the August 22 issue of the newspaper may go through several
printings: one at 6 a.m., for example, and one at 2 p.m. and one at 10
p.m. The 2 p.m. version would update or revise news in the 6 a.m.
version--or add new stories; the 10 p.m. version would update or revise
news in the 2 p.m. version--or add new stories. The newspapers printed
at 6 a.m., 2 p.m., and 10 p.m. would all be editions of the August 22 issue.
Egoism, Rational:
Acting in oneselfu0092s best interests (that is, acting selfishly) by
selecting what appears to be the most beneficial of all the choices
available. Russian writer Nikolay Gavrilovich Chernyshevsky (1828-1889)
centered various writings on this subject. His great contemporary,
Fyodor Mikhailovitch Dostoevsky (1821-1881), attacked rational egoism in
his novel Notes From the Underground. There are two types of rational egoism, which are as follows:
Psychological Egoism:
Belief that a personu0092s nature, or biological makeup, will always
cause him to act in his own self-interest. In other words, a person has
no free will; he will always end up choosing what he perceives is best
for him. Suppose, for example, that two persons each have a toothache
and a fear of dentists. After reviewing the alternatives, the first
person decides to go to the dentist to have the tooth extracted because
he perceives that the latter course will cause him less pain and
distress in the long run. The second person, after reviewing the
alternatives, decides to pull the tooth himself because he perceives
that this course of actionu0097despite the pain and greater risk of
complications that self-treatment posesu0097will cause him less mental
trauma than a dentistu0092s treatment. In both cases, there is no real
"decision." What the persons do is dictated by their genetic makeup and
other determining factors, according to proponents of this theory.
Normative Egoism:
Belief that a person will act in his own best interests if he first
thoroughly educates himself about the choices available. In this type of
egoism, the second person in the example above would presumably decide
to go to a dentist because, after educating himself about both
alternatives, he would realize that professional treatment is more
likely to produce a positive outcome.
The
rational egoists Dostoevsky criticizesu0097most notably
Chernyshevskyu0097maintained that one always acted in his own
self-interest, as in psychological egoism, but also ought to investigate
the available alternatives or options in order to make the most
informed choice. However, there is a conflict here. On the one hand,
psychological egoism presumes that a person has no free will. On the
other hand, normative egoism implies that a person has at least a
modicum of free will and, after educating himself, acts with
"enlightened self-interest." Nevertheless, Chernyshevsky believed that a
person had no free will regardless of how he went about making his
choice.
Elegy A somber poem or song that praises or laments the dead. Perhaps the finest elegy in English literature is Thomas Gray's "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard."
Elizabethan
Pertaining to the time when Elizabeth I reigned as queen of England.
Elizabeth, born in 1533, reigned from 1558 until her death in 1603. Elizabethan
may be used to describe the literature of the period (for example,
Elizabethan poems and Elizabethan plays) or anything else associated
with the age (such as Elizabethan costumes, Elizabethan customs,
Elizabethan music, and so on).
Encomium (Plural: Encomia).(1)
In ancient Greece, a poem in the form of a choral song praising a
victor in the Olympic games. (2) In modern usage, any speech, essay,
poem, etc., that praises a person.
Enjambment.Carrying
the sense of one line of verse over to the next line without a pause.
In the first four lines of "My Last Duchess," by Robert Browning,
enjambment joins the second and third lines (I call / That) and the third and fourth lines (Pandolf's hands / Worked):
That's my last Duchess painted on the wall,
Looking as if she were alive. I call That piece a wonder, now: Fr Pandolf's hands Worked busily a day, and there she stands.
Enter.Stage direction in a play manuscript indicating the entrance onto the stage of a character or characters.
Epic Long poem in a lofty style about the exploits of heroic figures. Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, as well as the Old English poem Beowulf, are examples of epics.
Epic Conventions Literary practices, rules, or devices that became commonplace in epic poetry. Among the classical conventions Milton used are the following:
.......(1) The invocation of the muse, in which a writer requests divine help in composing his work.
.......(2) Telling a story with which readers or listeners are already familiar; they know the characters, the plot, and the outcome. Most of the great writers of the ancient worldu0096as well as many great writers in later times, including Shakespeareu0096frequently told stories already known to the public. Thus, in such stories, there were no unexpected plot twists, no surprise endings. If this sounds strange to you, the modern reader and theatergoer, consider that many of the most popular motion pictures today are about stories already known to the public. Examples are The Passion of the Christ, Titanic, The Ten Commandments, Troy, Spartacus, Pearl Harbor, and Gettysburg. .......(3) Beginning the story in the middle, a literary convention known by its Latin term in media res (in the middle of things). Such a convention allows a writer to begin his story at an exciting part, then flash back to fill the reader in on details leading up to that exciting part. .......(4) Announcing or introducing a list of characters who play a major role in the story. They may speak at some length about how to resolve a problem (as the followers of Satan do early in Paradise Lost). .......(5) Conflict in the celestial realm. Divine beings fight and scheme against one another in the epics of Homer and Vergil, and they do so in Paradise Lost on a grand scale, with Satan and his forces opposing God and his forces. .......(6) Use of dramatic irony. Dramatic irony is a figure of speech in which a character in a story fails to see or understand what is obvious to the audience. Dramatic irony appears frequently in the plays of the ancient Greeks. For example, in Oedipux Rex, by Sophocles, dramatic irony occurs when Oedipus fails to realize what the audience knowsu0096that he married his own mother. In Paradise Lost, dramatic irony occurs when Adam and Eve happily go about daily life in the Garden of Eden unaware that they will succumb to the devil's temptation and suffer the loss of Paradise. Dramatic irony also occurs when Satan and his followers fail to understand that it is impossible ultimately to thwart or circumvent divine will and justice.
Epicedium Funeral hymn or ode; dirge
Epigram Wise or witty saying expressing a universal truth in a few words. Following are examples of epigrams from Shakespeare:
There's small choice in rotten apples.u0096The Taming of the Shrew: Act I, Scene I.
A goodly apple rotten at the heart, O, what a goodly outside falsehood hath!u0096The Merchant of Venice: Act I, Scene III. They are as sick that surfeit with too much as they that starve with nothing.u0096The Merchant of Venice: Act I, Scene II. How far that little candle throws his beams! So shines a good deed in a naughty world.u0096The Merchant of Venice: Act V, Scene I. Every cloud engenders not a storm.u0096Henry VI, Part III: Act V, Scene III. Words pay no debts.u0096Troilus and Cressida: Act III, Scene II. O! it is excellent to have a giant's strength, but it is tyrannous to use it like a giant.u0096Measure for Measure: Act II, Scene II.
Epigraph
(1) Quotation inserted at the beginning of a poem, a novel, or any
other literary work; (2) a dedication of a literary work or a work of
art such as a painting; (3) words inscribed or painted on a monument,
building, trophy, etc.
Epilogue
In Shakespeare, a short address spoken by an actor at the end of a play
that comments on the meaning of the events in the play or looks ahead
to expected events; an afterword in any literary work.
Epinicion (Plural: Epinicia): In ancient Greece, a choral ode celebrating an athletic victory. For additional information, click here.
Episode Scene or incident in a literary work.
Epistle Letter written by an apostle in the New Testament of the Bible; any letter, especially an informal or instructive one.
Epistolary Novel
Novel in which a character (or characters) tells the story through
letters (epistles) sent to a friend, relative, etc. For example, in Mary
Shelley's Frankenstein, Captain Robert Walton writes letters to
his sister to bring her up to date on his expedition in the Arctic.
After his ship takes Victor Frankenstein aboard, he listens to
Frankensteinu0092s story and writes it down in letter form.
Epitaph Inscription on a tomb or a written work praising a dead person; any commemoration, eulogy, or remembrance.
Epitasis The part of a stage play that develops the characters, plot, and theme. The epitasis follows the protasis.
Epithalamion (or Epithalamium, Epithalamy)
Poem or song honoring the bride and groom on the day of their wedding.
The term is derived from Greek words referring to the bedroom of a
woman. In ancient times, an epithalamion was performed in front of the
bridal chamber. However, epithalamion can also refer to a song
performed during the wedding ceremony. Surviving fragments of the Greek
poetess Saphho (610-580 B.C.) indicate that she wrote wedding songs
called epithalamia. In Rome, the great lyric poet Catullus (84-54
B.C.) wrote epithalamions. In the Renaissance, English poets such as
John Donne, Sir Philip Sydney, Ben Jonson, Robert Herrick, and Richard
Crashaw wrote epithalamions. Many critics believe Edmund Spenser's
"Epithalamion"u0096written in 1595 on the occasion of his second
marriageu0096is the greatest English poem in this genre. Percy Bysshe
Shelley (1792-1822) wrote a famous epithalamion, which used as its title
the Latin word for the termu0096epithalamium.
Epithet
One of the hallmarks of the style of the Greek epic poet Homer is the
epithet, a combination of a descriptive phrase and a noun. An epithet
presents a miniature portrait that identifies a person or thing by
highlighting a prominent characteristic of that person or thing. In
English, the Homeric epithet usually consists of a noun modified by a
compound adjective, such as the following: fleet-footed Achilles, rosy-fingered dawn, wine-dark sea, earth-shaking Poseidon, and gray-eyed Athena. The Homeric epithet is an ancient relative of such later epithets as Richard the Lion-Hearted, Ivan the Terrible, and America the Beautiful.
Homer repeated his epithets often, presumably so the listeners of his
recited tales could easily remember and picture the person or thing each
time it was mentioned. In this respect, the Homeric epithet resembles
the leitmotiv of opera composer Richard Wagner (1813-1883). The
leitmotiv was a repeated musical theme associated with a character, a
group of characters, an emotion, or an idea.
Epitome
(1) Statement summarizing the content of a book, essay, report, etc.
(2) Person or object that embodies all the qualities of something
Esprit d'escalier
(es PRE duh SKAL yay): Slow wit. Used to characterize a person who
thinks of the ideal reply or retort after leaving a conversation and
going upstairs (escalier). On the stairs, the ideal reply occurs to him.
Essay
Short, nonfiction composition on a single topic. The typical essay
contains 500 to 5,000 words, although some essays may contain only 300
words and others 10,000 or more words. Examples of essays are newspaper
or magazine articles that inform readers about current events, newspaper
or magazine editorials that argue for or against a point of view, movie
reviews, research papers, encyclopedia articles, articles in medical
journals, and articles in travel magazines. There are four types of
essays: those that inform the reader without taking a position; those
that argue for or against a point of view; those that describe a person,
place, thing, or idea; and those that tell a true story. Essays often
require extensive research to support claims made by the writer of the
essay.
Eulogy
Speech or written work paying tribute to a person who has recently
died; speech or written work praising a person (living, as well as
dead), place, thing, or idea.
Euphemism Word or phrase that softens the hard reality of the truth, such as senior citizen for old person, passed away for died, misstatement for lie, previously owned car for used car, collateral damage for civilian deaths during war, and pleasingly plump for fat. The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency once used the euphemism Health Evaluation Committee for assassination team. In general, good writers avoid euphemisms.
Euphuism Ornate, high-flown style of speaking or writing.
Excursion Stage direction in a play manuscript indicating that a military attack is taking place. The opening of Scene II in Act III of Shakespeare's King John contains such a stage direction.
Exemplum..Short narrative in verse or prose that teaches a moral lesson or reinforces a doctrine or religious belief.
Exeunt..[EX e unt] Stage direction in a play manuscript indicating the departure of two or more characters from the stage.
Exeunt Omnes..[EX e unt] Stage direction in a play manuscript indicating the departure of all the characters from the stage.
Exit Stage direction in a play manuscript indicating the departure of a character from the stage.
Exodos
(EX uh doss): In a drama of ancient Greece, the exit scene; the final part of the play
Expressionism
In literature, expressionism is a writing approach, process, or
technique in which a writer depicts a characteru0092s feelings about a
subject (or the writeru0092s own feelings about it) rather than the
objective surface reality of the subject. A writer, in effect, presents
his interpretation of what he sees. Often, the depiction is a grotesque
distortion or phantasmagoric representation of reality, for the
character or writer must reshape the objective image into his mind's
image. However, there is logic to this approach for these reasons: (1)
Not everybody perceives the world in the same way. What one person may
see as beautiful or good another person may see as ugly or bad.
Sometimes a writer or his character suffers from a mental debility, such
as depression or paranoia, which alters his perception of reality.
Expressionism enables the writer to present this altered perception. An
example of a character who sees reality through his mind's eye is Joseph
K., the protagonist of Franz Kafka's novel The Trial.
Exposition
In a story, the part of the plot that introduces the setting and
characters and presents the events and situations that the story will
focus on. Exposition also refers to an essay whose primary purpose is to inform readers rather than to argue a point.
Fable
Story that teaches a lesson or rule of living. The characters are
usually animals that speak and act like humans. The most famous fables
are those attributed to Aesop, a Greek, Thracian, Phrygian, Babylonian,
or Lydian storyteller or a group of storytellers who assigned the name Aesop to a collection of fables popularized in Greece. Aesop's fables are sometimes referred to as beast fables.
Fabliau
Short verse tale with coarse humor and earthy, realistic, and sometimes
obscene descriptions that present an episode in the life of
contemporary middle- and lower-class people. The fabliau uses satire and
cynicism, along with vulgar comedy, to mock one or several of its
characters. Not infrequently, the ridiculed character is a jealous
husband, a wayward wife, a braggart, a lover, a proud or greedy
tradesman, a doltish peasant, or a lustful or greedy clergyman. Plot
development often depends on a prank, a pun, a mistaken identity, or an
incident involving the characters in intrigue. The fabliau was popular
in France from 1100 to 1300, then went out of fashion. Chaucer revived
the format in The Canterbury Tales to write u0093The Milleru0092s
Tale,u0094 u0093The Reeveu0092s Tale,u0094 u0093The Cooku0092s
Tale,u0094 u0093The Shipmanu0092s Tale,u0094 and The Summoneru0092s
Tale.u0094 It is not entirely clear whether the fabliau was a pastime of
the upper classes as a means to ridicule their social inferiors or of
the middle and lower classes as a means to poke fun at themselves.
Fair Copy In Shakespeare's time, a play manuscript after it has been edited.
Farce Type of comedy
that relies on exaggeration, horseplay, and unrealistic or improbable
situations to provoke laughter. In a farce, plotting takes precedence
over characterization.
Figure of Speech
Word, phrase or sentence that (1) presents a u0093figureu0094 to the
mind of the reader, (2) presents an imaginative or unusual use of words
that the reader is not to take literally, or (3) presents a special
arrangement or use of words or word sounds that create an unusual
effect. Ordinary language that does not contain a figure of speech is
called literal language. Language that contains a figure of speech is
called figurative language. Figurative language is also sometimes called
imagery because it presents an image to the mind. Consider the
following sentences:
The leaves blew across the lawn. (Literal language)
The leaves danced across the lawn. (Figurative language)
Notice
that the second sentence presents a figure to the mind of the reader:
The leaves are dancing as if they were people. Obviously, the writer
does not mean that the leaves literally danced. However, they
u0093figurativelyu0094 danced. Now consider the following additional
examples:
Mr. Piper harvested a bushel of green vegetables. (Literal language)
Peter Piper picked four pecks of peppers. (Figurative language)
The
repetition of the "p" in the second sentence is considered a figure of
speech because it presents a sound to the mind. This glossary contains
definitions of various figures of speech. The most common figures of
speech are Alliteration, Irony, Metaphor, Metonymy, Onomatopoeia, Oxymoron, Paradox, Personification, Simile, and Synecdoche.
Flashback
Device in which a writer describes significant events of an earlier
time or actually returns the plot to an earlier time. Flashback enables
the author to inform the reader of significant happenings that influence
later action. Vehicles that writers use to return to earlier times
include dreams, memories, and stories told by the narrator or a
character.
Flourish
Stage direction in a play manuscript for music introducing the entrance
or exit of a king or another important person. The music may consist of
a short trumpet passage.
Foil
(1) A secondary or minor character in a literary work who contrasts or
clashes with the main character; (2) a secondary or minor character with
personal qualities that are the opposite of, or markedly different
from, those of another character; (3) the antagonist in a play or
another literary work. A foil sometimes resembles his or her contrasting
character in many respects, such as age, dress, social class, and
educational background. But he or she is different in other respects,
including personality, moral outlook, and decisiveness. In
Sophoclesu0092 play Antigone, Ismene is a foil of Antigone, her
sister. Ismene is easygoing, soft-spoken, and willing to keep her place.
Antigone, on the other hand, is headstrong, outspoken, and unwilling to
keep her place. Creon is also a foil of Antigone, and Antigone is a
foil of Creon. Creon represents government law and male dominance;
Antigone represents the moral law and female rights. They clash. In so
doing, one foil sets off the other. Their quarreling helps to reveal
their personality traits.
Folio
A folio is a sheet of printing paper folded once to form four separate
pages for printing a book. To better visualize a folio, hold before you a
standard sheet of typing paper and fold it as you would a letter..You
now have a rectangular piece of paper. Hold it so it opens from right
to left. What you are looking at is Page 1. Now turn the flap from right
to left to open the rectangle. You are now looking at Pages 2 and 3
separated by a crease. When you close the right flap over the left, you
will be looking at Page 4. A folio was considerably larger than a quarto.In
1623, friends and admirers of Shakespeare compiled a reasonably
authentic collection of 36 of Shakespeare's plays in a folio edition of
more than 900 pages that was entitled Mr. William Shakespeare's Comedies, Histories & Tragedies.
The printer and publisher was William Jaggard, assisted by his son
Isaac. This edition became known as The First Folio. Because of the
authenticity of this collection, later publishers used it to print
copies of the plays. Other folios were printed in 1632, 1663 and 1685.
In 1664, a second printing of the 1663 folio included the first
publication of Pericles, Prince of Athens.
Folklore
Stories, songs, and sayings transmitted by memory (that is, orally)
rather than by books or other printed documents, from one generation to
the next. Folklore thrives indepently of polished, sophisticated
literature in the form of ballads, fairytales, superstitions, riddles,
legends, fables, plays, nursery rhymes, and proverbs. Englishman William
Thoms invented the term folklore in 1846. Jacob and Wilhelm
Grimm, German scholars who studied folklore in the early 1800's,
compiled many tales based on their research, including the stories of
Briar-Rose (Sleeping Beauty) and Rumpelstiltskin.
Fool
In the courts of England in Shakespeare's time, a fool was a comic
figure with a quick tongue who entertained the king, the queen, and
their guests. He was allowed tou0096and even expected tou0096criticize
anyone at court. Many fools were dwarfs or cripples, their odd
appearance enhancing their appeal and, according to prevailing beliefs,
bringing good luck to the court. Actors William Kempe and Richard Armin
became London celebrities for their performances as fools in
Shakespeare's plays. Armin wrote a book about fools entitled Foole Upon Foole; or Six Sortes of Sottes.Egypt's pharaohs were the first rulers to use fools, notably Pygmies from African territories to the south.
Foot and Feet (Meter) See Meter.
Foreshadowing Device a writer uses to hint at a future course of action. The words a heart trouble
in the first line of u0093The Story of an Hour,u0094 by Kate Chopin,
refer to a condition of the main character, Mrs. Mallard, and foreshadow
the story's ironic ending, in which Mrs. Mallard dies from shock when
her husbandu0096whom she thought deadu0096walks through the front door.
Because of foreshadowing in the opening paragraph of the story, the
ending becomes believable. Shirley Jackson also uses foreshadowing in
the second paragraph of her outstanding short story u0093The
Lotteryu0094 in the following sentence: Bobby Martin had already
stuffed his pockets full of stones, and the other boys soon followed his
example, selecting the smoothest and roundest stones. . . . This
sentence foreshadows the stoning scene at the end of the story. Another
example of foreshadowing occurs in the prologue of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.
An actor called u0093the chorusu0094 recites a sonnet in which he
describes the bitter hatred separating the Montagues and Capulets and
identifies Romeo and Juliet as lovers who had the misfortune to be born
into warring families: u0093From forth the fatal loins of these two foes
[the Montagues and the Capulets] / A pair of star-crossu0092d lovers
take their life" (Lines 5-6). Take their life appears to have a
double-meaning: first, that they come into existence; second, in a
foreshadowing of events to come, that they go out of existence by taking
their own lives.
Foul Papers In Shakespeare's time, the original manuscript of a playwright which was later edited.
Frame Tale
Story with a plot structure in which an author uses two or more
narrators to present the action. The first narrator sets the scene and
reports to the reader the details of a story told by a character. (In
some frame tales, the first narrator reports the details of several
stories told by several narrators.) In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Captain Robert Waltonu0096a minor characteru0096is
the first narrator. He sets the scene and listens to the story told by
Victor Frankenstein, the main character. All of the information Walton
reports to the reader is in the form of letters written to his sister.
Thus, Frankensteinis a frame tale in that it is like a framed
painting: Walton's story is the frame, and Frankenstein's story is the
painting. Some frame talesu0096such as Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and Boccaccio's The Decameronu0096have several narrators telling stories "inside the frame." One famous frame taleu0096the Arabian Nights (also called The Thousand and One Nights)u0096has
only one narrator, a sultan's bride named Scheherazade, who tells many
tales "inside the frame," including the well-known stories of Sindbad
the Sailor, Aladdin and his magic lamp, and Ali Baba and his magical
command "Open sesame!"
Free Verse Form of poetry that ignores standard rules of meter
in favor of the rhythms of ordinary conversation. In effect, free verse
liberates poetry from conformity to rigid metrical rules that dictate
stress patterns and the number of syllables per line. French poets
originated free verse (or vers libre) in the 1880s, but earlier
poems of American poet Walt Whitman (1819-1892) and other writers
exhibited characteristics of free verse. Although free verse generally
contains no metrical patterns it may contain other types of patterns.
For examples, see "When Lilacs Last in the Door-Yard Bloom'd."
Gasconade
Excessive boasting; incessant bragging. Perhaps the most famous
braggart in all of literature is Sir John Falstaff, the rotund knight (Henry IV Part I, Henry IV Part II) who is brave in words but timid in deeds.
Genre
Type or kind, as applied to literature and film. Examples of genres are
romance, horror, tragedy, adventure, suspense, science fiction, epic
poem, elegy, novel, historical novel, short story, and detective story.
Gleeman
Anglo-Saxon minstrel who sang or recited poetry. Gleemen traveled from
place to place but sometimes found employment in the court of a monarch.
Gnomic (NO mik) Adjective describing writing that contains wise, witty sayings (aphorisms)
Goliard
(GAWL yerd) Wandering student of Medieval Europe who made merry and
wrote earthy or satiric verses in Latin. Goliards sometimes served as
jesters or minstrels
Gothic Fiction
Literary genre focusing on dark, mysterious, terrifying events. The
story unfolds at one or more spooky sites, such as a dimly lit castle,
an old mansion on a hilltop, a misty cemetery, a forlorn countryside, or
the laboratory of a scientist conducting frightful experiments. In some
Gothic novels and short stories, characters imagine that they see
ghosts and monsters. In others, the ghosts and monsters are real. The
weather in a Gothic story is often dreary or foul: There may be high
winds that rattle windowpanes, electrical storms with lightning strikes,
and gray skies that brood over landscapes. The Gothic genre derives its
name from the Gothic architectural style popular in Europe between the
12th and 16th centuries. Gothic structuresu0096such as
cathedralsu0096featured cavernous interiors with deep shadows, stone
walls that echoed the footsteps of worshippers, gargoyles looming on
exterior ledges, and soaring spires suggestive of a supernatural
presence. See also Southern Gothic.
Hagiography Book on the lives of saints; scholarly study of the lives of saints.
Hamartia Serious character flaw of the main character (protagonist) of a Greek tragedy. Often, this flaw is great pride, or hubris. But it may also be prejudice, anger, zealotry, poor judgment, an inherited weakness, or any other serious shortcoming.
Hautboys
[OH bwah] Stage direction in a play manuscript indicating that entering
characters are playing hautboys, which are Elizabethan oboes.
Heptameter See Meter.
Heroic Couplet.Unit of two rhyming lines in iambic pentameter. Following is an example:
What dire offence from am'rous causes springs,
What mighty contests rise from trivial things (Lines 1 and 2, The Rape of the Lock, by Alexander Pope)
Hexameter See Meter.
High Comedy
Comedy that relies on wit and subtle irony or sarcasm. High comedy
usually focuses on the everyday life of upper classes. It is generally
verbal rather than physical. See also Low Comedy.
Homily A clergyman's talk that usually presents practical moral advice rather than a lesson on a scriptural passage, as in a sermon.
Hubris or Hybris Great pride that brings about the downfall of a character in a Greek drama or in other works of literature.
Huitain: Eight-line stanza (French).
Hyperbole
Exaggeration; overstatement. Examples: (1) He [Julius Caesar] doth
bestride the narrow world like a Colossus, and we petty men walk under
his...huge legs.u0096Shakespeare. (Caesar has become a giant.) (2) Ten
thousand oceans cannot wash away my guilt. (3) Oscar has the appetite of
a starving lion.
Idyll Poem focusing on the simplicity and tranquillity of rural life; prose work with a similar focus. Idyll is derived from the Greek eidllion (little picture or image). The Greek poet Theocritus (300-260 B.C.) developed this genre.
Iamb and Iambic See Meter.
Induction In a Shakespeare play, an introductory event that precedes Act 1. For additional information, see The Taming of the Shrew.
In Medias Res Latin phrase for in the middle of things. It means that a story begins in the middle of the plot, usually at an exciting part. The writer of the story later uses flashback to inform the reader of preceding events. The Greek poet Homer originated this technique in his two great epics, The Iliad and The Odyssey.
Internal Conflict See Conflict.
Inversion See Anastrophe.
In everyday conversation, a person would say, "I plucked a rose for Huey in the green and dewy garden."
Invocation of the Muse
In ancient Greece and Rome, poets generally requested a muse (goddess)
to fire them with creative genius when they began long narrative poems,
called epics, about godlike heroes and villains. This request appeared
in the opening lines of their poems. In Greek mythology, there were nine
muses, all sisters, who were believed to inspire not only poets but
also historians, flutists, dancers, singers, astronomers, philosophers,
and other thinkers and artists. If one wanted to write a great poem,
play a musical instrument with bravado, or develop a grand scientific or
philosophical theory, he would ask for help from a muse by
u0093invoking the muse.u0094 The muse of epic poetry was named Calliope
[kuh LY uh pe].
Ipse Dixit Dogmatic or arbitrary statement made without supporting evidence. This Latin term means He said [it] himself.
Irony
(1) Saying the opposite of what is meant, or verbal irony; (2) result
or ending that is the opposite of what is expected, or situational
irony; (3) situation in which the audience attending a dramatic
presentation grasps the incongruity of a situation before the actors do,
or dramatic irony. Examples: (1) "What a beautiful day," Maxine said,
opening her umbrella. (2) In the movie Planet of the Apes, an
astronaut who lands on another planet where intelligent apes rule
discovers a startling irony at the end of the movie: When looking over a
vast wasteland, he sees the head of the Statue of Liberty and realizes
he was on earth all the time. Apparently, a nuclear war had destroyed
humankind while he was time-traveling. While in his Einsteinian time
warp, the apes had evolved to an almost human level. (3) In Oedipus Rex,
by Sophocles, Oedipus is unaware that he has married his own mother
even though the audience is well aware of the incestuous union.
Jargon Vocabulary understood by members of a profession or trade but usually not by other members of the general public. Cerebrovascular accident is medical jargon for stroke; perp is police jargon for perpetrator, a person who commits a crime. Jargon can also refer to writing or speech that makes no senseu0096gibberish.
Jeu d'esprit (Pronounce the eu like the oo in wood; pronounce esprit as uh SPREE) Witty writing; clever wording; jest; pun, ingenious turn of phrase. A literary work with jeu d'esprit is quick-witted but not necessarily profound. The literal English translation of this French term is play of the spirit or play of intelligence.
Jeu de mots (Pronounce the eu like the oo in wood; pronounce de as duh; pronounce mots as moh) Pun; play on words.
Jongleur Itinerant minstrel in medieval England and France who sang songs (his own or those written by others) and told stories.
Kenning Compound expression, often hyphenated, representing a single noun. For example, the Old English epic Beowulf uses the two-word term whale-road to refer to the sea or ocean. Other examples of kennings include devil's helper for sinner and widow-maker for gun.
Laurel Wreath
Wreath woven of the large, glossy leaves of the laurel tree. It was
customary in ancient Greece to crown a champion Olympic athlete, poet,
or orator with a laurel wreath for outstanding achievement. Over the
years, other nations and cultures adopted this custom. Today, the phrase
to win one's laurels is often used figuratively to indicate that an athlete, scholar, or stage performer has earned distinction in his or her field.
Lay Medieval narrative poem, written in couplets, for singing by a minstrel to the accompaniment. A lay had eight syllables in each line.
Lexis The complete vocabulary of a language or a field of study.
Litotes Creation of a positive or opposite idea through negation. Examples: (1) I am not unaware of your predicament. (2) This is no small problem. (3) I'm not forgetful that you served me well.u0096John Milton.
Low Comedy
Comedy that relies on slapstick and horseplay. It often focuses on the
everyday life of lower classes. Low comedy is generally physical rather
than verbal. See also High Comedy.
Lyric Poetry
(1) Poetry that presents the deep feelings and emotions of the poet as
opposed to poetry that tells a story or presents a witty observation.
Sonnets, odes, and elegies are examples of lyric poems. William Wordsworth, John Keats, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and William Blake are among the writers of lyric poetry. Shakespeare's sonnets
are lyric poems, although his verse plays are not; they tell a story.
Lyric poetry often has a pleasing musical quality. (2) Poetry that can
be set to music. The word lyric derives from the Greek word for lyre, a stringed instrument in use since ancient times.
Machine
Armlike device in an ancient Greek theater that could lower a "god"
onto the stage from the "heavens." The Greek word for machine, mechane, later gave rise to a pejorative Latin term, deus ex machina (god from a machine),
to describe a contrived event in a literary work or film. A contrived
event is a plot weakness in which a writer makes up an incidentu0096such
as a detective stumbling upon an important clue or a hero arriving in
the nick of time to save a damsel in distressu0096to further the action.
The audience considers such events improbable, realizing that the
writer has failed to develop the plot and the characters in such a way
that their actions spring from their motivations. The term (pronounced DAY ihs ex MAHK in uh orDE ihs ex MAHK in uh) is usually used adverbially, as in The policeman arrived deus ex machina to overhear the murderder admit his guilt to his hostage. However, it can also refer to a character who becomes the "god from the machine."
Macrocosm The world as a whole; the universe. See also Microcosm.
Magnum Opus Great work; masterpiece; an author's most distinguished work. Latin: magnum, great; opus, work.
Malapropism
Unintentional use of an inappropriate word similar in sound to the
appropriate word, often with humorous effect. The word derives from the
name Mrs. Malaprop, a character in The Rivals, a 1775 play by Richard Brinsley Sheridan. Sheridan invented her name from the French words mal propos, loosely translated as badly chosen, not right for the occasion, or not appropriate. Mrs. Malaprop has the habit of using near-miss words. For example, she observes that she does not have much affluence over her niece and refers to contiguous countries as contagious
countries. However, almost two centuries before Sheridan presented a
character who mixed up words in this way, Shakespeare introduced
characters who did sou0096most notably Dogberry in Much Ado About Nothing. Examples of Dogberry's malapropisms are the following:
Comparisons are odorous. (odious)
Our watch, sir, have indeed comprehended two auspicious persons." (apprehended, suspicious) O villain! thou wilt be condemned into everlasting redemption for this. (perdition)
Mask
In the drama of ancient Greece, a face covering with exaggerated
features and a mouth device to project the voice. Actors wore masks to
reveal emotion or personality; to depict the trade, social class or age
of a character; and to provide visual and audio aids for audience
members in the rear of the theater.
Master of Revels In Shakespeare's time, a government censor who examined all plays for offensive material.
Melodrama Literary work or film that uses maudlin sentimentality and stereotypical characters.
Memoir
Type of autobiography in which the writer focuses primarily on the
people (often famous personages) with whom he or she came into contact.
Metaphor Comparing one thing to an unlike thing without using like, as or than. Examples:
(1) The iron tongue of midnight hath told twelve.u0096Shakespeare. (The
striker or clapper of the bell is being compared to the tongue of a
speaking human being.) (2) The sea being smooth, how many shallow bauble
boats dare sail upon her patient breast .u0096Shakespeare. (The sea is
being compared to a woman with a "patient breast.") (3) I am a man whom
Fortune hath cruelly scratched.u0096Shakespeare. (Fortune is being
compared to an entity that can be cruel.) (4) In battle, the soldier is a
tiger. (5) Michael Casey's face is a map of Ireland.
Metaphysical Poetry See "To His Coy Mistress" on this web site.
Meter
In verse and poetry, meter is a recurring pattern of stressed
(accented, or long) and unstressed (unaccented, or short) syllables in
lines of a set length. For example, suppose a line contains ten
syllables (set length) in which the first syllable is unstressed, the
second is stressed, the third is unstressed, the fourth is stressed, and
so on until the line reaches the tenth syllable. The line would look
like the following one (the opening line of Shakespeareu0092s
u0093Sonnet 18") containing a pattern of unstressed and stressed
syllables. The unstressed syllables are in blue and the stressed
syllables in red.
Shall I comPARE thee TO a SUMmeru0092s DAY?
Each pair of unstressed and stressed syllables makes up a unit called a foot. The line contains five feet in all, as shown next:
.....1..............2...............3.............4...............5
Shall I..|..comPARE..|..thee TO..|..a SUM..|..meru0092s DAY?
.......A foot containing an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable (as above) is called an iamb. Because there are five feet in the line, all iambic, the meter of the line is iambic pentameter. The prefix pent in pentameter means five (Greek: penta, five). Pent
is joined to words or word roots to form new words indicating five. For
example, the Pentagon in Washington has five sides, the Pentateuch of
the Bible consists of five books, and a pentathlon in a sports event has
five events. Thus, poetry lines with five feet are in pentameter.
.......Some
feet in verse and poetry have different stress patterns. For example,
one type of foot consists of two unstressed syllables followed by a
stressed one. Another type consists of a stressed one followed by an
unstressed one. In all, there are five types of feet:
The length of linesu0096and thus the meteru0096can also vary. Following are the types of meter and the line length:
.......Meter
is determined by the type of foot and the number of feet in a line.
Thus, a line with three iambic feet is known as iambic trimeter. A line
with six dactylic feet is known as dactylic hexameter. Consider now the
following two lines from William Blakeu0092s poem u0093The Tygeru0094:
Tyger Tyger burning bright
In the forests of the night
These lines contain trochaic feetu0096stressed unstressed, as in TYger and BURNingu0096but
the final foot of each line is incomplete, containing only a stressed
syllable. The absence of the unstressed syllable is called catalexis, and bright and night are called catalectic feet.
The meter of these lines is trochaic tetrameteru0096tetrameter because
they each contain three complete feet and one incomplete foot, for a
total of four feet.
Metonymy
Substitution of a word or phrase to stand for a word or phrase similar
in meaning. Examples: (1) In Shakespeare's time, the crown was
anti-Catholic. ("Crown" stands for Queen Elizabeth I.) (2) The White
House was severely criticized for its opposition to the tax increase.
("White House" stands for the president or the president and his
advisers.) (3) Wall Street welcomes the reduction in interest rates.
("Wall Street" represents investors.) (4) Sweat, not wealth, earned her
the respect of her peers. ("Sweat" stands for hard work.)
Microcosm A tiny world within the macrocosm. Often a microcosm represents ideas and activities present in the macrocosm. In Herman Melville's novel Moby Dick, the whaling ship The Pequod is a microcosm. In William Golding's novel The Lord of the Flies,
the island on which children take on the negative characteristics of
adults in the world at large is a microcosm. In Shirley Jackson's short
story u0093The Lottery,u0094 the village is a microcosm representing
backward ideas in the world at large, or macrocosm. In the movie Titanic,
the ship is a microcosm carrying the same kind of peopleu0096heroes and
cowards, saints and sinnersu0096present in the macrocosm.
Minstrel Roving medieval musician who sang and recited poetry.
Mise en Scne
[meez on sen] In a stage play, the stage set (including the walls,
furniture, etc.) and the arrangement of the actors; the process of
arranging the set and the actors.
Monometer See Meter.
Motif
Recurring theme in a literary work; recurring theme in literature in
general. Maltreatment of women is a motif that appears in u0093Hills
Like White Elephants,u0094 a short story by Ernest Hemingway; u0093The
Story of an Hour,u0094 a short story by Kate Chopin; and u0093The
Chrysanthemums,u0094 a short story by John Steinbeck.The love of money
as the root of evil is a motif that occurs in many works of literature. See also Epithet.
Mock-EpicWork that parodies the serious, elevated style of the classical epic poemu0096such as The Iliad or The Odyssey,
by Homeru0096to poke fun at human follies. Thus, a mock-epic is a type
of satire; it treats petty humans or insignificant occurrences as if
they were extraordinary or heroic, like the great heroes and events of
Homer's epics. Alexander Pope's "The Rape of the Lock" is generally considered the finest example of the mock-epic in the English language.
Morality PlayAllegorical
drama of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It teaches a lesson
about how Christians should live and what they must do to save their
souls. A morality play is, in effect, a sermon that is acted out. The
characters of a typical morality play include personifications of
virtues (such as hope and charity), vices (such as pride and sloth), or
other qualities, as well as personifications of objects (such as money)
or activities (such as death or fellowship). In addition, God and angels
may appear as characters. Everyman is generally considered the finest work of this type.
MotivationReason or reasons behind a character's action; what induces a character to do what he does; motives. In Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, love motivates the title characters. In Shakespeare's Macbeth, ambition (lust for power) motivates the title character and his wife to murder the king.
Narrator One who tells a story.
NaturalismIn literature, an extreme form of realism that
developed in France in the 19th Century. It was inspired in part by the
scientific determinism of Charles Darwin, an Englishman, and the
economic determinism of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, both Germans.
Four Frenchmenu0096Hippolyte Taine, Edmond and Jules Goncourt, and Emile
Zolau0096applied the principles of scientific and economic determinism
to literature to create literary naturalism. According to its followers,
literary naturalism stresses the following beliefs:
(1) Heredity and environment are
the major forces that shape human beings. In other words, like lower
animals, humans respond mainly to inborn instincts that influence
behavior in concert withu0096and sometimes in opposition
tou0096environmental influences, including economic, social, cultural,
and familial influences. For example, in August Strindberg's play Miss Julie,
the title character responds partly to her inborn female instinct for
male companionship and partly to her environmentally induced hatred of
men. Consequently, she both desires and despises Jean, causing her deep
internal conflict.
(2) Human beings have no free will, or very little of it, because heredity and environment are so powerful in determining the course of human action. (3) Human beings, like lower animals, have no soul. Religion and morality are irrelevant. (Strindberg, an atheist when he wrote Miss Julie, later converted to Christianity under the influence of the writings of Emanuel Swedenborg.) (4) A literary work should present life exactly as it is, without preachment, judgment, or embellishment. In this respect, naturalism is akin to realism. However, naturalism goes further than realism in that it presents a more detailed picture of everyday life. Whereas the realist writer omits insignificant details when depicting a particular scene, a naturalist writer generally includes them. He wants the scene to be as u0093naturalu0094 as possible. The naturalist writer also attempts to be painstakingly objective and detached. Rather than manipulating characters as if they were puppets, the naturalist writer prefers to observe the characters as if they were animals in the wild and then report on their activity. Finally, naturalism attempts to present dialogue as spoken in everyday life. Rather than putting u0093unnaturalu0094 wording in the mouth of a character, the naturalist writer attempts to reproduce the speech patterns of people in a particular time and place.
Naturalist
writers generally achieve only limited success in adhering to Tenet 4.
The main problem is that it is next to impossible for a writer to remain
objective and detached, like a scientist in a laboratory. After all, a
scientist analyzes existing natural objects and phenomena. A naturalist
writer, on the other hand, analyzes characters he created; they may be
based on real people, but they themselves are not real. Thus, in
bringing these characters to the stage or the printed page, the
naturalist writer brings a part of himselfu0096a subjective part. Also,
in their use of literary devicesu0096such as Strindbergu0092s use of
symbols in Miss Julie to support his themeu0096naturalist writers
again inject their subjective selves into the play. In real life, would
Miss Julie own a dog that mates with a pug, symbolizing and
foreshadowing her brief sexual encounter with Jean? Would she force her
fianc to jump over a horsewhip that symbolizes her effort to dominate
him?
Neologism [ne ALL uh jizm] Word or phraseu0096or a new meaning for an existing word or phraseu0096that is accepted into a dictionary. For example, the word sandwich
was a neologism in 1762 when John Montaguu0096a British nobleman who
had served as First Lord of the Admiraltyu0096placed slabs of meat
between two pieces of bread as a snack to sustain him while he was
seated at a table in a 24-hour gambling marathon. His snack caught on
and, because he held the rank of Earl of Sandwich, it was named after
him. Examples of neologisms that have entered the dictionary in the last
50 years include designated hitter, beatnik, nerd, e-mail, cyberspace, and 9/11.
Thousands of words and phrases enter the English language each year to
name an invention, a development, a process, a trend. For example, the
word parachute was coined upon the invention of a device that enabled a person to jump from an airplane and fall slowly to the earth. Cellular phone and cellphone
entered the dictionary after the invention of a telephone that enabled a
person to communicate over long distances through a wireless device. Robot (from the Czech word robota, meaning forced labor) was coined to describe mechanical "beings" that could perform tasks normally carried out by humans. In 2003, Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary
accepted the word pleather to describe a plastic material resembling
plastic. William Shakespeare has been credited with coining many words
because no word existed in his day to express what he wanted to say.
Among these words are dauntless, fashionable, alligator, bedroom,
pander, outbreak, laughingstock, the naked truth, amazement, leapfrog,
madcap, frugal, articulate, immediacy, advertising, investment, puke, and zany.
New Comedy See Old Comedy.
Nihilism Nihilism (a term derived from the Latin word nihil, meaning nothing)
is a philosophy that calls for the destruction of existing traditions,
customs, beliefs, and institutions and requires its adherents to reject
all values, including religious and aesthetic principles, in favor of
belief in nothing. The term was coined in the Middle Ages to describe
religious heretics. It was resurrected in mid-19th Century Russia to
describe radicals and revolutionaries. Supporters of this philosophy saw
it as a stage in the struggle against tyranny and injustice. Ivan Turgenev made nihilism a household world in Russia with the publication of Fathers and Sons
in 1861. Its main characteru0096the nihilist Bazarovu0096became the
most famous nihilist in the world, even though he was fictional.
Nine WorthiesMythological,
legendary, biblical, or historical personages alluded to in literature
because of their heroic qualities. The Nine Worthies include (1) Hector, the Trojan hero slain by Achilles; (2) Alexander the Great, the Macedonian general who conquered the Persians and marched through Asia; (3) Joshua, the successor of Moses; (4) David, the slayer of Goliath and second king of Israel and Judah; (5) Judas Maccabeus, a great Jewish general who defeated Syrian armies and purified and restored the temple in Jerusalem; (6) Julius Caesar, the great Roman general and political leader; (7) King Arthur, ruler of Camelot in the Arthurian legends; (8) Charlemagne, king of the Franks and Holy Roman Emperor; and (9) Godfrey of Bouillon, one of the leaders of the First Crusade in the Holy Land. In Love's Labour's Lost, Shakespeare presents an entertainment in which characters take the parts of the Nine Worthies.
Noble Savage
Since ancient times, writers have often depicted aboriginal or
uncivilized people as nobleu0096untainted by the corrupt ways of
civilization. Greek and Latin authors, such as Homer and Ovid, were
sympathetic to some primitive peoples in their writings. In 1672, the
English poet, critic and dramatist John Dryden coined the term noble savage in a play called The Conquest of Granada.
Between 1760 and 1780, the French writer and philosopher Jean-Jacques
Rousseau popularized the concept of the noble savage in his writings. In
Moby-Dick,
Herman Melville developed this motif with three u0093noble
savagesu0094: the harpooners Queequeg, Tashtego, and Daggoo. For
example, he depicts Queequegu0096a tattooed savage who sells shrunken
headsu0096as being more tolerant and benevolent than the civilized
Christian whalers.
Nom de Plume Pen name; pseudonym. Writers often use noms de plume
to hide their identity or their sexu0096or to simplify a
hard-to-remember or hard-to-pronounce name. Among writers who used noms
de plume were Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain), William Sydney
Porter (O. Henry), Eric Blair (George Orwell), Sir Arthur Thomas
Quiller-Couch (Q), Franois Marie-Arouet (Voltaire), and Amandine-Aurore
Lucile Dudevant (George Sand).
Novel
Long fictional story told in prose. Novels typically have more
characters than a short story and a more complicated plot that might
take place in various settings, sometimes over a period of months or
years. Examples of novels are The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Moby Dick, The Great Gatsby, David Copperfield, Babbitt, Crime and Punishment, and The Scarlet Letter.
Novella Short prose tale that often has satire and a moral. Sometimes novellas were collected into a single work that used a frame tale to establish a theme common to all of them. The stories then were told "inside the frame" and became part of it. Boccaccio's Decameron contains novellas.
Novelette Prose work shorter than a novel but longer than a short story. Examples of novelettes are Robert Louis Stevenson's The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness.
Objectivity
Ability of an author to keep his opinions and preachments out of a
poem, a play, a short story, a novel, or any other literary work that he
writes. Modern readers tend to admire objectivity in an author.
Ockham's Razor Principle expressed by William of Ockham (1285-1349), a German Franciscan priest, that the simplest solution is the best.
Octameter See Meter.
Octave First eight lines of a Petrarchan, or Italian, sonnet.
Petrarch's sonnets each consist of an eight-line stanza (octave) and a
six-line stanza (sestet). The first stanza presents a theme, and the
second stanza develops it. The rhyme scheme is as follows: (1) first
stanza (octave): ABBA, ABBA; (2) second stanza (sestet): CDE, CDE.
Ode In ancient Greece, a lyric poem on a serious subject that develops its theme with dignified language intended to be sung.
Ode, Romantic: Dignified but highly lyrical (emotional) poem in which the author speaks to a person or thing absent or present.
Oeuvre (OO vrah) The complete works of an author, a composer, a painter, etc. Oeuvre is a French word for work. See also Canon.
Old Comedy
In Greece of the Fifth Century, BC, a genre of comedy that displayed
great imagination and used cutthroat satire, caricature, and sometimes
vulgar dialogue to ridicule public figures, politics, ideas, trends, and
institutions. Aristophanes was the unsurpassed master of old
comedy. In the Fourth Century, old comedy was succeeded by a lighter,
less caustic form of comedy that centered on fictional characters drawn
from everyday life rather than on public figures, politics, and so on.
This genre was appropriately labeled new comedy.
Old English Versification
Unrhyming
verse, without stanzas, with a caesura (pause) in the middle of each
line. The lines contain caesuras to represent the pauses that speakers
normally use in everyday speech. Thus, each line is divided into two
parts. Each part is called a hemistich (HEM e stick), which is half a
line of verse. A complete line is called a stich. Each hemistich
contains two stressed (accented) syllables and a varying number of
unstressed (unaccented) syllables. Following are the opening three lines
of Beowulf in Old English, with the space in the middle representing the caesura.
Old English With a Space for the Caesura
Translation
Hwt! We Gar-Dena in geardagum,
Lo. we have heard of the glory in days of old
eodcyninga, rym gefrunon,
of the Spear-Danes, of the kings of the people,
hu a elingas ellen fremedon.
how the athelings did deeds of valor.
Onkos Headdress worn by some actors in ancient Greece to increase their height and, thus, visibility to theater audiences.
Onomatopoeia
Figure of speech in which (1) a word mimics a sound or (2) an
arrangement of words in a rhythmic pattern suggests a sound or an image.
Examples of No. 1: burp, varoom, oink, crackle, moo, hiss,
gong, thud, splash, zip, creak, boom, slurp, crunch, quack, twitter,
honk, hoot, squeak, buzz, and zoom.
Opera Plural of opus, Latin for work.
An opera is a play set to music. The words are sung and sometimes
presented in dialogue that resembles conversation but sounds like
singing.
Opus See Opera.
Oration Speech delivered with great emotion to spur listeners to action.
Otiose Writing [OH she ohss] Extremely wordy writing in which the author is too lazy to edit for conciseness.
Oxymoron
Combining contradictory words to reveal a truth. Oxymoron is a form of
paradox. However, unlike paradox, oxymoron places opposing words side by
side. Examples: (1) Parting is such sweet sorrow.u0096Shakespeare. (2) Working in a coal mine is living death. (3) The hurricane turned the lush island retreat into a hellish paradise.
Pantomime Use of body movements and facial expressions by actors to convey a message without speaking.
Papyrus See Quill.
Parabasis
(puh RAB uh sis) In the drama of ancient Greece, an ode in which the
chorus addresses the audience to express opinions of the author,
including his views on politics, social trends, and other topics.
Parodos (PAIR uh doss) In the drama of ancient Greece, a song sung by the chorus when it enters; also, the moment when the chorus enters.
Paradox
Contradictory statement that may actually be true. Paradox is similar
to oxymoron in that both figures of speech use contradictions to state a
truth. However, paradox does not place opposing words side by side, as
oxymoron does. Examples: (1) They called him a lion. But in the boxing
ring, the lion was a lamb. (2) For slaves, life was death, and death was life.
Paranomasia (PAIR uh no MAY zhuh) Pretentious term for pun.
Parody
Imitation of a literary work or filmu0096or the style used by a writer
or filmmakeru0096in order to ridicule the work and its writer or
producer. The Austin Powers movies are parodies of spy films.
Pastoral Poem
Poem focusing on some aspect of rural life. It may center on the love
of a shepherd for a maiden, on the death of a friend, or on the quiet
simplicity of rural life. The writer of a pastoral poem may be a highly
educated city dweller who longs for the peace and quiet of the country
or who extolls the virtues of a shepherd girl. Pastoral is derived from the Latin word pastor, meaning shepherd.
Pen Name See Nom de Plume.
Periakti
In the drama of ancient Greece, a prism having surfaces painted with
pictures. When it revolved, it changed the scenery on a stage.
Peripeteia (also peripetia or peripety) In a stage tragedy in ancient Greece, a sudden reversal of fortune from good to bad.
Persona
In a literary work, a narrator or speaker who presents the work to the
reader. The persona may be an active character in the work, or he may be
an unidentified narrator or commentator. The persona may or may not
represent the views of the author. In the short stories of Edgar Allan
Poe, the persona--the person describing the action in first-person point
of view--is often a madman.
In some cases, the persona is not even human.
Peroration (1) Concluion of a speech in which the speaker summarizes the main points. (2) Long, pompous speech; bombastic speech.
Personification
Giving humanlike qualities or human form to objects and abstractions.
Personification is a form of metaphor. Examples: (1) Thou has done a
deed whereat valor will weep.u0096Shakespeare. (Notice that valor, an abstraction, weeps.) (2) Fortune brings in some boats that are not steeredu0096Shakespeare. (3) Because I could not stop for Death, He kindly stopped for me. u0096Emily Dickinson. (4) The house pleaded for a new coat of paint.
Philippic
Speech that bitterly denounces, blames, accuses, or insults a person;
speech that viciously attacks a person or his ideas. The word Philippic is derived from the Greek Philippikos (belonging to Philip).
In 351 BC, the Athenian orator Demosthenes (384-322 BC) began making
speeches against the encroachment of King Philip of Macedon (382-336) on
Greek territory. These speeches became known as "Philippics."
Picaresque Novel
Novel that presents the episodic adventures (each a story in itself) of
a roguish character as he travels from place to place and meets a
variety of other characters, some of them also travelers. The episodes
often center on feats of derring-do and romantic escapades.
Plaint Expression of grief or sorrow in a poem. Such an expression is said to be plaintive, a word that is a cousin of the word plaintiff, a legal term for a person who brings a suit, or complaint, in a court of law against a defendant.
Plot The events that unfold in a story; the action and direction of a story; the story line.
Poetics
Important work by Aristotle written about 335 B.C. It analyzes Greek
theater and outlines its origin and development. One of its theses is
that literature and other forms of art imitate the activity of humans.
Tragedy is the higher form of the playwright's craft, Aristotle says,
because it imitates the action of noble persons and depicts lofty
events. Comedy, on the other hand, focuses on ordinary humans and
events.
Poetry
Language that expresses powerful emotions and ideas in a stanza or
stanzas that may use rhythm and rhyme, as well as other rhetorical
devices. For a full discussion of prose, poetry, and verse, click here.
Prolixity.Wordiness, long-windedness.
Prologue Introduction to a play or another literary work. In Shakespeare's Henry V,
a chorus (one person) speaks a prologue that encourages the audience
members to use their imaginations to create what an Elizabethan stage
cannot: battlefields, clashing swords, the might of warriors.
Shakespeare writes, "Think when we talk of horses, that you see them
printing their proud hoofs i' the receiving earth."
Prologos In the drama of ancient Greece, a prologue that begins the play with dialogue indicating the focus or theme of the play.
Promptbook or Prompt Copy In Shakespeare's time, the edited version of a play in which an acting company inserted stage directions.
Proscenium
(1) The stage of a theater; (2) the part of the stage extending out
toward the audience; (3) the arch over the stage that separates the
stage from the audience. The proscenium arch helps create the illusion
that the audience viewing a play is looking into real world just as the
frame around a television screen helps TV viewers do the same.
Prose Language of everyday speech and writing. For a full discussion of prose, poetry, and verse, click here.
Protagonist (Greek Play)
Main character in an ancient Greek play who usually interacts with the
chorus. In a tragedy, the protagonist is traditionally a person of
exalted statusu0096such as a king, a queen, a political leader, or a
military herou0096who has a character flaw (inordinate pride, for
example). This character flaw causes the protagonist to make an error of
judgment. Additionally, the typical protagonist experiences a moment of
truth in which he or she recognizes and acknowledges his or her
mistakes, failures, or sins.
Protagonist (Modern Sense) Main character of a novel, play, or film.
Protasis Opening part of a stage drama that introduces the characters and focus of the play.
Pseudonym See Nom de Plume.
Pun
Play on words; using a word that sounds like another word but has a
different meaning. Examples: (1) Marriage is a wife sentence. (2) They
went and told the sexton and the sexton tolled the bell.u0096Thomas
Hood.
Quarto
A quarto is sheet of printing paper folded twice to form eight separate
pages for printing a book. To better visualize a quarto, hold before
you a standard sheet of typing paper and fold it as you would a letter.
You now have a rectangular piece of paper. Fold the paper again to form
it into a square (or near square). Now unfold the paper and lay it flat
before you. Notice that the sheet of.paper now has four
sections on one side and four on the other. In Shakespeare's time,
printing paper was folded in this way. Each of the four sections on one
side became a page, and each of the .four sections on the
other side became page. Thus, there were eight pages in all. Each of
these pages was about a foot high. William Shakespeare's plays were
first published in quarto and folio
texts. Some of the quarto texts are based on inferior, unauthorized
copies of Shakespeare's plays. For example, an unscrupulous publisher
named John Danter, hoping to make money by selling Romeo and Juliet,
used notes taken during a performance of the play to piece together a
copy of it for sale in a 1597 quarto edition. What resulted was
Shakespeare "as you hate him"u0096full of errors and inconsistencies.
Quatrain Stanza or poem of four lines. A quatrain usually has a rhyme scheme, such as abab, abba, or abcb.
Quill
Writing instrument used before the invention of the fountain pen, the
ballpoint pen, and other writing instruments. A quill was the hollow,
rigid shaft of a birdu0092s feather. The word u0093penu0094 is derived
from the Latin name for u0093featheru0094u0096u0093penna.u0094
Shakespeare and other writers of his day used a variety of quills that
they dipped in an ink container (inkwell) on a stand (standish)
that held all the writing materials. If a writeru0092s pocket lacked
jingle, he invested in a goose quill. If he could afford something
better, he invested in a swan quill. Writers or artists who needed
quills to produce fine lines purchased crow quills. Quills from ducks,
eagles, turkeys, hawks and owls also served as u0093word
processors,u0094 producing plays, poems, and sometimes revolution.
Quills were the writing instruments of choice between 500 A.D. and 1850
A.D. (In the ancient world, writers used a variety of other instruments
to write history, literature, announcements, bureaucratic records, and
so on. These instruments included shaped twigs or branches that
impressed words into clay, mallet-driven chisels that etched words in
stone, brushes that wrote on pottery and other smooth surfaces (such as
plaster and animal skins), sharpened bone or metal that inscribed words
on wax surfaces, and sharpened reed stems dipped in ink that wrote on
papyrus, an Egyptian water plant whose pith (the soft center of a stem)
was dried and pressed to make thin sheets suitable for receiving
impressions. The introduction of the quill in the 500's (an event
recorded by St. Isidore, a Spanish theologian) greatly eased the task of
writers, much as personal computers did when they replaced typewriters
in the last half of the 20th Century.)
Redundancy Writing flaw in which unnecessary wording is used. Examples: Wrong: Her dress was green in color. Right: Her dress was green. Wrong: The president will arrive at 3 p.m. this afternoon. Right: The president will arrive at 3 p.m. Wrong: Please repeat that statement again. Right: Please repeat that statement.
Re-Enter Stage direction in a play manuscript indicating the re-entrance onto the stage of a character or characters.
Refrain Group of words repeated at key intervals in a poem, such as Dylan Thomas's "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night."
Realism
In literature, a movement that stressed the presentation of life as it
is, without embellishment or idealization. However, it was not as
extreme in this presentation as Naturalism.
Repartee Quick, witty, often amusing reply; a conversation full of witty replies; verbal fencing or sparring.
Rhetoric Art of effectively using words in speech and writing; the study of language and its rules. Rhetoric
can also refer to insincere or deceptive language, as in this sentence:
The senator promised to tell the truth, but in his news conference he
spouted nothing but political rhetoric.
Rhyme, Consonant
A special type of rhyme (consonance) in which pairs of words with
different vowel sounds have the same final consonants. Example: best, first.
Rhyme, End
Rhyme in which the final syllable (or syllables) of one line mimic the
sound of the final syllable (or syllables) of another line.
Rhyme, Eye Form of rhyme in which
the pronunciation of the last syllable of one line is different from
the pronunciation of the last syllable of another line even though both
syllables are identical in spelling except for a preceding consonant.
For example, the following end-of-line word pairs would constitute eye
rhyme: cough, rough; cow, mow; daughter, laughter; rummaging, raging.
Rhyme, Feminine Rhyme in which the final two syllables of one line mimic the sound of the final two syllables of another line. Examples: repeat, deplete; farrow, narrow; scarlet; varlet.
Rhyme, Internal Rhyme that occurs inside a line. Example: The knell of the bell saddened me.
Rhyme, Masculine Rhyme in which the final yllable of one line mimics the sound of the final yllable of another line. Examples: black, back; hell, well; shack, black.
Roman Clef [ro MAH na KLEH]
Novel in which real persons are thinly disguised as fictional
characters with fictional names. For example, if an author wrote a roman
clef about the private lives of movie stars, he would base the novel on
the lifestyles of real actors and actresses but give them fictitious
names.
Romance, Medieval Long
poem resembling an epic in its focus on heroic deeds. Unlike an epic,
however, a medieval romance is light in tone, and its content is at
times fantastic and magical. In a medieval romance chivalrous knights
pay homage to lovely ladies. The knights are often pure in heart and
soul, although sorely tempted by the wiles of beautiful women. There may
be merriment and singing. An example of a medieval romance is Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.
Romanticism
In literature, a movement that championed imagination and emotions as
more powerful than reason and systematic thinking. u0093What I feel
about a person or thing,u0094 a romantic poet might have said, u0093is
more important than what scientific investigation, observation, and
experience would say about that person or thing.u0094 Intuitionu0096that
voice within that makes judgments and decisions without
the
aid of reasonu0096was a guiding force to the romantic poet. So was
nature. Romanticism began in the mid-1700's as a rebellion against the
principles of classicism.
Whereas classicism espoused the literary ideals of ancient Greece and
Romeu0096objectivity, emotional restraint, and formal rules of
composition that writers were expected to followu0096romanticism
promoted subjectivity, emotional effusiveness, and freedom of expression
. u0093I want to write my way,u0094 the romantic poet might have said,
u0093not the way that writers in ancient times decreed that I should
write.u0094 In English literature, Wordsworth and his friend, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, were pioneers in the development of the Romantic Movement. However,
neither romantic nor classical writing was always entirely faithfully
to its ideals. For example, a classical writer may have exhibited
emotional effusion from time to time whereas a romantic writer may have
exhibited emotional restraint on occasion. Writers today continue to use
many of the principles of both the classical and romantic schools of
writing.
Rondeau
Lyric poem consisting of three stanzas with a total of fifteen lines.
Lines 9 and 15 are the same--that is, they make up a refrain. Line 9
occurs at the end of the second stanza and line 15 at the end of the
third stanza. These lines are very short and rhyme only with each other
and not with any other lines. In a rondeau, all lines except 9 and 15
generally contain eight syllables each. Click here to see an example of a rondeau.
Sarcasm
Form of verbal irony that insults a person with insincere praise. For
example, a cruel person might tell a homely woman wearing dowdy clothes,
"I see, Miss America, that you are wearing the latest Dior ensemble."
Satire.Literary
work that attacks or pokes fun at vices and imperfections; political
cartoon that does the same. Satire may make the reader laugh at or feel
disgust for the person or thing satirized. The TV program Saturday Night Live often uses satire to expose abuses and follies.
Satyr Play
In the drama of ancient Greece, a play that pokes fun at a serious
subject involving gods and myths; a parody of stories about gods or
myths. Fragments of Sophocles's satyr play Ichneutae (Trackers) survive along with his seven complete tragedies.
Scenario Plot outline of a play, opera, motion picture, or TV program.
Scene (1) Part of an act of a play; (2) a settingin
a literary work, opera, or film; (3) a theater stage in ancient Greece
or Rome; (4) part of a literary work, opera, or film that centers on one
aspect of plot development.
One
of the main divisions of a play. Shakespeare's plays each have five
acts. Each act is subdivided into scenes. An act generally focuses on
one major aspect of the plot or theme. Between acts, stagehands may
change scenery, and the setting may shift to another locale.
Science Fiction
Literary genre focusing on how scientific experiments, discoveries, and
technologies affect human beings for better or worse. Science fiction
differs from pure fantasy in that it presents events that appear to be
scientifically plausible. Traveling to another galaxy in a spaceship is
scientifically plausible. Riding to the moon on a winged horse is not
scientifically plausible.
Scop Old English poet often attached to a monarch's court. A scop composed and recited his own poetry.
Sennet
Stage direction in a play manuscript to signal a trumpet flourish that
ntroducess the entrance of a character, such as the entrance of King
Lear (Act 1) in Shakespeare's play.
Sentimentality
A flaw in a literary work or film in which the author relies on
tear-jerking or heart-wrenching scenes rather than writing talent or
cinematic skill to evoke a response in readers.
Sermon A clergyman's talk centering on a scriptural passage.
Sestet
Final six lines of a Petrarchan, or Italian, sonnet. Petrarch's sonnets
each consist of an eight-line stanza (octave) and a six-line stanza
(sestet). The first stanza presents a theme, and the second stanza
develops it. The rhyme scheme is as follows: (1) first stanza (octave):
ABBA, ABBA; (2) second stanza (sestet): CDE, CDE.
Sestina
Poem with six stanzas of six lines each, followed by a stanza with
three lines (tercet). A Provenal troubadour, Arnaut Daniel, developed
the sesinta, which was written in unrhymed iambic pentameter.
Setting
Setting is the environment in which a story unfolds. It includes (1)
the time and period of history, (2) the place, (3) the atmosphere, (4)
the clothing, (5) the living conditions, and (6) the social climate.
Sometimes the setting is extremely important. For example, the
atmosphere can influence characters in a ghost story; the living
conditions can influence characters in a story about class conflicts or
life in prison.
Shaped Verse See Concrete Poetry.
Sic
Word inserted in a quoted statement in a research work (essay, magazine
article, doctoral thesis, book, etc.) to indicate that the quotation
contains an error. Sic appears in brackets after the error. Following is an example of the use of sic:
The president wrote in his diary that "my critics refuse to acknowledge that the econommy [sic] is improving."
Simile Comparing one thing to an unlike thing by using like, as, or than.
Examples: (1) The barge she sat in, like a burnished throne, burned on
the water.u0096Shakespeare. (2) And the muscles of his brawny arms are
strong as iron bandsu0096Longfellow. (3) His hand was small and cold; it
felt like wax.u0096Margaret Truman. (4) In the morning the dust hung
like fog, and the sun was as red as ripe new bloodu0096John Steinbeck.
Soliloquy Recitation in a play in which a character reveals his thoughts to the audience but not to other characters in the play.
Solus Stage direction in a play manuscript indicating a character is alone on the stage.
Sonnet
Form of lyric poetry invented in Italy that has 14 lines with a
specific rhyme scheme. The Italian Petrarchan sonnet consists of an
eight-line stanza (octave) and a six-line stanza (sestet). The first
stanza presents a theme, and the second stanza develops it. The rhyme
scheme is as follows: (1) first stanza (octave): ABBA, ABBA; (2) second
stanza (sestet): CDE, CDE. The Shakespearean sonnet (also called the English sonnet)
has three four-line stanzas (quatrains) and a two-line unit called a
couplet. A couplet is always indented; both lines rhyme at the end. The
meter of Shakespeare's sonnets is iambic pentameter
(except in Sonnet 145). The rhyming lines in each stanza are the first
and third and the second and fourth. In the couplet ending the poem,
both lines rhyme. All of Shakespeare's sonnets follow the same rhyming
pattern.
Sonnet, Curtal Shortened or contracted sonnet. A curtal sonnet consists of eleven lines instead of the usual fourteen for the standard Shakespearean or Petrarchan sonnet. An example of a curtal sonnet is "Pied Beauty," by Gerard Manley Hopkins.
Soubrette
In a comedy (a play or an opera), a maid or servant girl involved in
intrigue affecting the central characters. She usually has a quick
tongue, common sense, and a good sense of humor. One of the most famous
soubrettes in the history of theater is Suzanne in The Marriage of Figaro (play by Beaumarchais and opera by Mozart).
Southern Gothic.Fictional
genre with a setting in the Southern United States that vests its
stories with foreboding and grotesquerie. Begun in the twentieth
century, Southern Gothic replaces the romanticism of nineteenth-century
Gothic works with realism. However, southern Gothic retains the
disturbing elements of earlier Gothic works, whether in the form of a
deranged character, a forbidding forest, or a sense of impending doom.
Among the writers associated with this genre are Flannery O'Connor,
William Faulkner, Carson McCullers, and Tennessee Williams.
Spondee and Spondaic See Meter.
Spoonerism Slip of the tongue in which a speaker transposes the letters of words. Pee little thrigs is a spoonerism for three little pigs.
Spenserian Stanza A stanza with eight lines in iambic pentameter and a ninth line in iambic hexameter. Edmund Spenser (1552-1599) originated this format in his great allegorical poem The Faerie Queene. The rhyme scheme of the stanza is ababbcbcc.
Stasimon (pronunciation: STASS uh mon): In a Greek play, a scene in which the chorus sings a song, uninterrupted by dialogue.
Stationers' Register
In Shakespeare's time, a book in which the English government required
printers to register the title of a play before the play was published.
The full official name of the Stationers' Register was the Hall Book of the Worshipful Company of Stationers.
Stanza Lines that form a division or unit of a poem. Stanzas generally have four lines.
Stereotype
Character in a literary work or film who thinks or acts according to
certain unvarying patterns simply because of his or her racial, ethnic,
religious, or social background. A stereotype is usually an image that
society projects or imposes on every member of a group as a result of
prejudice or faulty information. Examples of stereotypes are the Irish
drunk, the Italian mobster, the dishonest car salesman, the plain-Jane
librarian, the shyster lawyer, the Machiavellian politician, and the
dumb blonde.
Stichomythia
(stik uh MITH e uh) In a stage play brief, alternating lines of
dialogue spoken in rapid-fire succession. It occurs frequently in Greek
drama, especially when characters are arguing or expressing strong
emotions. Following is an example of stichomythia in The Clouds, by Aristophanes, in which two charactersu0096Unjust Cause and Just Causeu0096are insulting each other:
Unj. You are a dotard and absurd.
Just You are debauched and shameless. Unj. You have spoken roses of me. Just And a dirty lickspittle. Unj. You crown me with lilies. Just And a parricide. Unj. You don't know that you are sprinkling me with gold. Just Certainly not so formerly, but with lead. Unj. But now this is an ornament to me. Just You are very impudent. Unj. And you are antiquated.
Sturm und Drang
(Storm and Stress): In Eighteenth Century Germany, a literary movement
characterized by a rejection of many classical literary conventions (in
particular the three classical unities
adhered to strictly by French writers but often ignored by William
Shakespeare), by great passion and enthusiasm, by disquiet and
impatience, and by an exposition of folk themes.
Style
Style is the way an author writes a literary work. It manifests itself
in the authoru0092s choice of words and phrases, the structure of
sentences, the length of paragraphs, the tone of the work, and so on.
Just as painters, singers, and dancers have different styles, so too do
authors. One author may use a great deal of dialogue while another
author uses little. Some authors use difficult vocabulary; others use
simple vocabulary. Ernest Hemingway uses simple words, but the story
they tell may be complex. Charles Dickens describes people with unusual
names and memorable characteristics. Uriah Heep has slimy hands; Mr.
Murdstone, who is vicious and cruel, dresses in black. To describe
people and places, the author of Beowulf
uses a special figure of speech called a kenning. A kenning combines
two nouns, usually separated by a hyphen, to create an image. Thus, sea becomes whale-road and boat becomes wave-traveler.
Subplot Secondary or minor plot in a story usually related to the main plot.
Suspense Anxiety about what will happen next in a story. In Poe's short story "The Pit and the Pendulum,"
the main character is strapped to a board in a dark cell while a
pendulum in the form of a steel blade swings over him. With each swing,
the pendulum descends closer to his body. The reader is kept in suspense
about how the character will free himself.
Symbol
In a literary work or film, a person, place, thing or idea that
represents something else. Writers often use a snake as a symbol for
evil, as in Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown." Commonly used symbols include the eagle (strength), a flag (patriotism), and the sea (life).
Syncope Omitting letters or sounds within a word. The word bos'n as a shortened version of boatswain (a naval officer) is an example of syncope.
Synecdoche Substitution of a part to stand for the whole, or the whole to stand for a part. Examples: (1) The Confederates have eyes in Lincoln's government. (The word "eyes" stands for spies.) (2) Jack bought a new set of wheels. ("Wheels" stands for a car.) (3) The law pursued the bank robbers from Maine to Florida. ("Law" stands for police.)
SynesthesiaUse
of an adjective associated with one sensation to describe a noun
referring to another sensation. Examples: (1) a cold voice; (2) The
closer the roses got to death, the louder their scent (Toni Morrison, Beloved, Knopf, 1987).
Tautology Wordiness, needless repetition. See also prolixity and redundancy.
Tercet.In
poetry, a unit of three lines that usually contain end rhyme. (Examples
of tercets are the three-line stanzas of terza rima, defined below.)
Terza Rima Italian verse form invented by Dante Alighieri (1265-1321).
It consists of a series of three-line stanzas in which Line 2 of one
stanza rhymes with Lines 1 and 3 of the next stanza. The rhyme scheme
progresses in the following pattern: aba, bcb, cdc, ded, efe, ghg, and
so on. The following English translation of the first lines from the Divine Comedyu0096with the original Dante lines on the rightu0096demonstrate the rhyme scheme:
Along the journey of our life half way.................Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita
I found myself again in a dark wood.................mi ritrovai per una selva oscura Wherein the straight road no longer lay.............ch la diritta via era smarrita. Ah, tongue can never make it understood:........Ahi quanto a dir qual era cosa dura So harsh and dense and savage to traverse.......esta selva selvaggia e aspra e forte That fear returns in thinking on that wood..........che nel pensier rinova la paura! It is so bitter death is hardly worse....................Tant' amara che poco pi morte; But, for the good it was my chance to gain,........ma per trattar del ben ch'i' vi trovai, The other things I saw there I'll rehearse.............dir de l'altre cose ch'i' v'ho scorte English translation: Dale, Peter. The Divine Comedy. London: Anvil Press, 1996.
Tetralogy In the drama of ancient Greece, four plays (three tragedies and one satyr play) staged by a playwright during a drama competition. (See Dionysus.)
Tetrameter See Meter.
Theater, Greek
Open-air structure in which plays were performed. The stage faced the
afternoon sunlight to illuminate a performance while allowing the
audience to view the action without squinting. A Greek theater consisted
of the following:
Skene: Building behind the stage. First used as a dressing area for actors (and sometimes an
entrance or exit area for actors), the skene eventually became a background showing appropriate scenery. Paraskenia: Extensions or annexes on the sides of the skene. Proscenium: Acting area, or stage, in front of the skene. Orchestra: Ground-level area where the chorus performed. It was in front of the proscenium. Parados: Passage on the left or right through which the chorus entered the orchestra. (Also, a song sung by the chorus when it entered or the moment when the chorus enters. Thymele: Altar in the center of the orchestra used to make sacrifices to Dionysus. Theatron: Tiered seating area built into a hillside in the shape of a horseshoe. Machine: Armlike device on the skene that could lower a "god" onto the stage from the heavens.
Theater of the Absurd
Term coined in 1965 by critic Martin Eslin to describe the plays of
Samuel Beckett and other writers who believed that life is meaningless.
For more information about this genre, see Waiting for Godot.
Theme Main idea of a literary work; the thesis.
Thespian
Actor or actress. Also, an adjective referring to any person or thing
pertaining to Greek drama or drama in general. The word is derived from Thespis, the name of a Greek of the 6th Century B.C. who was said to have been the first actor on the Greek stage.
Tone
Prevailing mood or atmosphere in a literary work. One may compare the
tone of a poem, a novel, a play, or an essay to the tone of the human
voice as it projects the emotions of the speaker or to the appearance of
the sky as it dispenses rain or sunlight. Thus, the tone of a literary
work may be joyful, sad, brooding, angry, playful, and so on. The tone
of Thomas Gray's "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard" is somber; the tone of Voltaire's Candide is mocking and sarcastic; the tone of Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor is jocund and farcical.
Tiring House In Shakespeare's time, dressing rooms of actors behind a wall at the back of the stage. To tire means to dressu0096that is, to attire oneself. Sometimes, the wall of the tiring house could stand as the wall of a fortress under siege.
Torches Stage direction in a Shakespeare play indicating that entering characters are carrying lit torches.
Tragedy (Greek) Verse drama written in elevated language in which a noble protagonist falls to ruin during a struggle caused by a flaw (hamartia)
in his character or an error in his rulings or judgments. Following are
the characteristics of a Sophocles tragedy: (1) It is based on events
that already took place and with which the audience is familiar. (2) The
protagonist is a person of noble stature. (3) The protagonist has a
weakness and, because of it, becomes isolated and suffers a downfall.
(4) Because the protagonist's fall is not entirely his or her own fault,
the audience may end up pitying him or her. (5) The fallen protagonist
gains self-knowledge. He has a deeper insight into himself and
understands his weakness. (6) The audience undergoes catharsis, a
purging of emotions, after experiencing pity, fear, shock and other
strong feelings. The people go away feeling better. (7) The drama
usually unfolds in one place in a short period of time, usually about a
day.
Tragicomedy Play that has tragic events but ends happily. Examples are Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice, The Two Noble Kinsmen, and Pericles, Prince of Tyre.
Transcendentalism
Belief that every human being has inborn knowledge that enables him to
recognize and understand moral truth without benefit of knowledge
obtained through the physical senses. Using this inborn knowledge, an
individual can make a moral decision without relying on information
gained through everyday living, education, and experimentation. One may
liken this inborn knowledge to conscience or intuition. American author
Henry David Thoreau believed that this inborn knowledge served as a
moral guiding forceu0096that this inner knowledge was a higher,
transcendent form of knowledge than that which came through the senses.
Because Thoreau and his fellow transcendentalists trusted their own
inner light as a moral guiding force, they exhibited a fierce spirit of
self-reliance. They were individualists; they liked to make decisions
for themselves. If the government adopted a policy or a law that
offended their consciences, they generally reacted strongly. Thoreau's
essay u0093Civil Disobedienceu0094
expresses his reaction and measured response to government dictums that
legitimized slavery and the Mexican War. Transcendentalism did not
originate with Thoreau or his fellow American transcendentalists but
with the German philosopher Emanuel Kant. He used the German word for transcendental to refer to intuitive or innate knowledgeu0096knowledge which is a priori rather than a posteriori.
Travesty
(1) Play, novel, poem, skit, film, opera, etc., that trivializes a
serious subject or composition. Generally, a travesty achieves its
effect through broad humor and through incongruous or distorted language
and situations. Examples of works that contain travesty are
Cervantesu0092s Don Quixote de La Mancha and Shakespeareu0092s A Midsummer Nightu0092s Dream (the Act V staging of Pyramis and Thisbe
by the bumbling tradesmen). Literary works that mock trivial or
unimportant subjects are not travesties; travesties mock only serious,
dignified, or noble subjects. (2) A work in literature, music, or art
that is so poorly done that it fails to meet even the minimum standards
for style, technique, form, etc. (3) Any gross distortion or
misrepresentation of a procedure, a custom, an approach, a method, a
system, or a course of action. For example, a trial in which the judge
is incompetent and the jury is biased may be termed a travesty.
Trimeter See Meter.
Trochee and Trochaic See Meter.
Trope Figure of speech; figurative language.
Troubadour Lyric poet/musician of southern France or northern Italy; minstrel.
Ubi Sunt Ubi sunt is Latin for where are.
The term is applied to poetry that laments the passing of people,
places, things, or ideas by rhetorically asking where they are now in
order to call attention to the inexorable passage of time and the
inevitability of death, decay, and obsolescence. Franois Villon's "Ballade des dames du temps jadis" is a fine example of this genre.
Unities
Three key elements of dramatic structure: time, place, and action.
These unities, formulated in part by Aristotle in his commentary on
Greek drama and in part by the Italian Renaissance humanist Lodovico
Castelvetro, suggested that a play should have one setting with a single
plot thread that unfolds in one short time period, about a day.
However, some playwrights began ignoring these ancient rules.
Shakespeare observed them in some of his plays but ignored them in
others. For example, in The Winter's Tale, Shakespeare not only shifts the setting, but he also leaps ahead 16 years.
Universality Appealing to readers and audiences of any age or any culture. For example, although Robert Louis Stevenson's The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
is set in London of the late 19th Century, its messageu0096that each
human being has a good side and dark sideu0096applies and appeals to
people today in every country. Likewise, the central conflict of
Sophoclesu0092s Antigone, the individual vs the state (or moral
law vs man-made law), has remained relevant since its first performance
more than 2,400 years ago.
Verisimilitude Having the appearance of truth; realism.
In a fictional work, a writer creates unreal characters and situations
and asks the reader to pretend that they are real. To help the reader in
this task, the writer tells his tale in such a way that he makes it
seem credibleu0096that is, he gives it u0093verisimilitude.u0094 Verisimilitude is derived from the Latin words veritas (truth) and similis (similar). Thus, verisimilitude in a literary work confers on it the quality of appearing true or similar to the truth.
Verse
Collection of lines (as in a Shakespeare play) that follow a regular,
rhythmic pattern. For a full discussion of prose, poetry, and verse, click here.
Villanelle
Form of poetry popularized mainly in France in the 16th Century. It
usually expressed pastoral, idyllic sentiments in imitation of the
Italian villanella, a type of song for singers and dancers that centered
on rural, peasant themes. When French writers such as Joachim du Bellay
(1522-1560) and Philipe Desportes (1546-1606) began writing
villanelles, these poems did not have a fixed format. However, when Jean
Passerat (1534-1602) wrote a villanelle whose format caught the fancy
of critics, that format became the standard for all future villanelles.
The format is as follows:
Number of Stanzas: six
Lines in Each Stanza: three in each of the first five stanzas, four in the last. A three-line stanza is called a tercet; a four-line stanza, a quatrain. Refrains: two lines, the first and third of the first stanza, must be repeated in the other stanzas. Here is the pattern: Line 1 of the first stanza is repeated as Line 3 of the second stanza, as Line 3 of the fourth stanza, and as Line 3 of the sixth stanza. Line 3 of the first stanza is repeated as Line 3 of the third stanza, Line 3 of the fifth stanza, and Line 4 of the sixth stanza. End Rhyme: aba in the first five stanzas; abaa in the last stanza. "Do not Go Gentle into That Good Night," by Dylan Thomas, is an example of a villanelle.
Within Stage direction in a play manuscript indicating that a person speaking or being spoken to is behind a door or inside a room
Zeugma Use of one word (usually an adjective or a verb) to serve two or more other words with more than one meaning. Example: The dance floor was square, and so was the bandleaderu0092s personality. Explanation: Square describes the dance floor and the bandleaderu0092s personality with different meanings.
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Literary terms
Monday, August 27, 2012
literary terms 1
Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.u0096Unknown author, 16th Century.
Birds of a feather flock together [probably based on an observation of Robert Burton (1577-1640) in The Anatomy of Melancholy: "Birds of a feather will gather together."] A great dowry is a bed full of brambles.u0096George Herbert, Outlandish Proverbs, 1640. Fish and visitors smell in three days.u0096Benjamin Franklin. One tongue is enough for a woman.u0096J. Ray, English Proverbs (1670). A friend in need is a friend indeed.u0096Of Latin origin. A barber learns to shave by shaving fools.u0096J. Ray, English Proverbs (1670).
The peasant pledged the country his loyalty; loyalty was his only possession.
. My conscience hath a thousand several tongues, And every tonguebrings in a several tale, And every talecondemns me for a villain.u0096Shakespeare, Richard III.
In the garden green and dewy
A rose I plucked for Huey
I am tall; you are short.
The world will little note nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here.u0096Abraham Lincoln, "Gettysburg Address." To err is human, to forgive divine.u0096Alexander Pope, "Essay on Criticism."
I come from the rural north, from the urban south comes she.
John is a good worker, and a bright student is Mary. A fop their passion, but their prize a sot.u0096Alexander Pope. Flowers are lovely, love is flowerlikeu0096Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
What dire offence from am'rous causes springs,
What mighty contests rise from trivial things (Lines 1 and 2, The Rape of the Lock, by Alexander Pope)
That's my last Duchess painted on the wall,
Looking as if she were alive. I call That piece a wonder, now: Fr Pandolf's hands Worked busily a day, and there she stands.
.......(1) The invocation of the muse, in which a writer requests divine help in composing his work.
.......(2) Telling a story with which readers or listeners are already familiar; they know the characters, the plot, and the outcome. Most of the great writers of the ancient worldu0096as well as many great writers in later times, including Shakespeareu0096frequently told stories already known to the public. Thus, in such stories, there were no unexpected plot twists, no surprise endings. If this sounds strange to you, the modern reader and theatergoer, consider that many of the most popular motion pictures today are about stories already known to the public. Examples are The Passion of the Christ, Titanic, The Ten Commandments, Troy, Spartacus, Pearl Harbor, and Gettysburg. .......(3) Beginning the story in the middle, a literary convention known by its Latin term in media res (in the middle of things). Such a convention allows a writer to begin his story at an exciting part, then flash back to fill the reader in on details leading up to that exciting part. .......(4) Announcing or introducing a list of characters who play a major role in the story. They may speak at some length about how to resolve a problem (as the followers of Satan do early in Paradise Lost). .......(5) Conflict in the celestial realm. Divine beings fight and scheme against one another in the epics of Homer and Vergil, and they do so in Paradise Lost on a grand scale, with Satan and his forces opposing God and his forces. .......(6) Use of dramatic irony. Dramatic irony is a figure of speech in which a character in a story fails to see or understand what is obvious to the audience. Dramatic irony appears frequently in the plays of the ancient Greeks. For example, in Oedipux Rex, by Sophocles, dramatic irony occurs when Oedipus fails to realize what the audience knowsu0096that he married his own mother. In Paradise Lost, dramatic irony occurs when Adam and Eve happily go about daily life in the Garden of Eden unaware that they will succumb to the devil's temptation and suffer the loss of Paradise. Dramatic irony also occurs when Satan and his followers fail to understand that it is impossible ultimately to thwart or circumvent divine will and justice.
There's small choice in rotten apples.u0096The Taming of the Shrew: Act I, Scene I.
A goodly apple rotten at the heart, O, what a goodly outside falsehood hath!u0096The Merchant of Venice: Act I, Scene III. They are as sick that surfeit with too much as they that starve with nothing.u0096The Merchant of Venice: Act I, Scene II. How far that little candle throws his beams! So shines a good deed in a naughty world.u0096The Merchant of Venice: Act V, Scene I. Every cloud engenders not a storm.u0096Henry VI, Part III: Act V, Scene III. Words pay no debts.u0096Troilus and Cressida: Act III, Scene II. O! it is excellent to have a giant's strength, but it is tyrannous to use it like a giant.u0096Measure for Measure: Act II, Scene II.
The leaves blew across the lawn. (Literal language)
The leaves danced across the lawn. (Figurative language)
Mr. Piper harvested a bushel of green vegetables. (Literal language)
Peter Piper picked four pecks of peppers. (Figurative language)
What dire offence from am'rous causes springs,
What mighty contests rise from trivial things (Lines 1 and 2, The Rape of the Lock, by Alexander Pope)
Comparisons are odorous. (odious)
Our watch, sir, have indeed comprehended two auspicious persons." (apprehended, suspicious) O villain! thou wilt be condemned into everlasting redemption for this. (perdition)
Shall I comPARE thee TO a SUMmeru0092s DAY?
.....1..............2...............3.............4...............5
Shall I..|..comPARE..|..thee TO..|..a SUM..|..meru0092s DAY?
Tyger Tyger burning bright
In the forests of the night
(1) Heredity and environment are
the major forces that shape human beings. In other words, like lower
animals, humans respond mainly to inborn instincts that influence
behavior in concert withu0096and sometimes in opposition
tou0096environmental influences, including economic, social, cultural,
and familial influences. For example, in August Strindberg's play Miss Julie,
the title character responds partly to her inborn female instinct for
male companionship and partly to her environmentally induced hatred of
men. Consequently, she both desires and despises Jean, causing her deep
internal conflict.
(2) Human beings have no free will, or very little of it, because heredity and environment are so powerful in determining the course of human action. (3) Human beings, like lower animals, have no soul. Religion and morality are irrelevant. (Strindberg, an atheist when he wrote Miss Julie, later converted to Christianity under the influence of the writings of Emanuel Swedenborg.) (4) A literary work should present life exactly as it is, without preachment, judgment, or embellishment. In this respect, naturalism is akin to realism. However, naturalism goes further than realism in that it presents a more detailed picture of everyday life. Whereas the realist writer omits insignificant details when depicting a particular scene, a naturalist writer generally includes them. He wants the scene to be as u0093naturalu0094 as possible. The naturalist writer also attempts to be painstakingly objective and detached. Rather than manipulating characters as if they were puppets, the naturalist writer prefers to observe the characters as if they were animals in the wild and then report on their activity. Finally, naturalism attempts to present dialogue as spoken in everyday life. Rather than putting u0093unnaturalu0094 wording in the mouth of a character, the naturalist writer attempts to reproduce the speech patterns of people in a particular time and place.
The president wrote in his diary that "my critics refuse to acknowledge that the econommy [sic] is improving."
Unj. You are a dotard and absurd.
Just You are debauched and shameless. Unj. You have spoken roses of me. Just And a dirty lickspittle. Unj. You crown me with lilies. Just And a parricide. Unj. You don't know that you are sprinkling me with gold. Just Certainly not so formerly, but with lead. Unj. But now this is an ornament to me. Just You are very impudent. Unj. And you are antiquated.
Along the journey of our life half way.................Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita
I found myself again in a dark wood.................mi ritrovai per una selva oscura Wherein the straight road no longer lay.............ch la diritta via era smarrita. Ah, tongue can never make it understood:........Ahi quanto a dir qual era cosa dura So harsh and dense and savage to traverse.......esta selva selvaggia e aspra e forte That fear returns in thinking on that wood..........che nel pensier rinova la paura! It is so bitter death is hardly worse....................Tant' amara che poco pi morte; But, for the good it was my chance to gain,........ma per trattar del ben ch'i' vi trovai, The other things I saw there I'll rehearse.............dir de l'altre cose ch'i' v'ho scorte English translation: Dale, Peter. The Divine Comedy. London: Anvil Press, 1996.
Skene: Building behind the stage. First used as a dressing area for actors (and sometimes an
entrance or exit area for actors), the skene eventually became a background showing appropriate scenery. Paraskenia: Extensions or annexes on the sides of the skene. Proscenium: Acting area, or stage, in front of the skene. Orchestra: Ground-level area where the chorus performed. It was in front of the proscenium. Parados: Passage on the left or right through which the chorus entered the orchestra. (Also, a song sung by the chorus when it entered or the moment when the chorus enters. Thymele: Altar in the center of the orchestra used to make sacrifices to Dionysus. Theatron: Tiered seating area built into a hillside in the shape of a horseshoe. Machine: Armlike device on the skene that could lower a "god" onto the stage from the heavens.
Number of Stanzas: six
Lines in Each Stanza: three in each of the first five stanzas, four in the last. A three-line stanza is called a tercet; a four-line stanza, a quatrain. Refrains: two lines, the first and third of the first stanza, must be repeated in the other stanzas. Here is the pattern: Line 1 of the first stanza is repeated as Line 3 of the second stanza, as Line 3 of the fourth stanza, and as Line 3 of the sixth stanza. Line 3 of the first stanza is repeated as Line 3 of the third stanza, Line 3 of the fifth stanza, and Line 4 of the sixth stanza. End Rhyme: aba in the first five stanzas; abaa in the last stanza. "Do not Go Gentle into That Good Night," by Dylan Thomas, is an example of a villanelle. |
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