suggestive of a narrative poem telling of a hero's deeds
The Classical culture of ancient Greece produced The Iliad and The Odyssey, epic poems that tell tales of gods and heroes, while Anglo-Saxon epics mixed pagan and religious elements.
A dramatic poem relies heavily on dramatic elements such as monologue (speech by a single character) and dialogue (conversation involving two or more characters).
A dramatic poem relies heavily on dramatic elements such as monologue (speech by a single character) and dialogue (conversation involving two or more characters).
a literary composition in the form of a conversation
A dramatic poem relies heavily on dramatic elements such as monologue (speech by a single character) and dialogue (conversation involving two or more characters).
Even poems without exact end rhyme may include slant rhyme, in which the rhyming sounds are similar but not identical, or internal rhyme, in which words rhyme within lines.
use of the same consonant at the beginning of each word
Alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds, as in “cloudless climes and starry skies” and “Then shall the fall further the flight in me” from George Herbert’s “Easter Wings."
a compound word serving as a metaphorical name for something
Common to Anglo-Saxon literature is a figurative device called a kenning, in which a new word or noun phrase is coined to describe an object in an original manner.