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Sonnet. A fourteen line poem, usually in iambic pentameter, with a
varied rhyme scheme. The two main types of sonnet are the Petrarchan (or
Italian) and the Shakespearean. The Petrarchan Sonnet is divided into two
main sections, the octave (first eight lines) and the sestet (last six lines).
The octave presents a problem or situation which is then resolved or commented
on in the sestet. The most common rhyme scheme is A-B-B-A A-B-B-A C-D-E C-D-E,
though there is flexibility in the sestet, such as C-D-C D-C-D.
Spenserian Stanza. A nine-line stanza, with the first eight lines in
iambic pentameter and the last line in iambic hexameter (called an Alexandrine).
The rhyme scheme is A-B-A-B B-C-B-C C. Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene is
written in Spenserian stanzas.
Style. The manner of expression of a particular writer, produced by
choice of words, grammatical structures, use of literary devices, and all the
possible parts of language use. Some general styles might include scientific,
ornate, plain, emotive. Most writers have their own particular styles.
Subplot. A subordinate or minor collection of events in a novel or
drama. Most subplots have some connection with the main plot, acting as foils
to, commentary on, complications of, or support to the theme of, the main plot.
Sometimes two opening subplots merge into a main plot.
Symbol. Something that on the surface is its literal self but which
also has another meaning or even several meanings. For example, a sword may be a
sword and also symbolize justice. A symbol may be said to embody an idea. There
are two general types of symbols: universal symbols that embody universally
recognizable meanings wherever used, such as light to symbolize knowledge, a
skull to symbolize death, etc., and constructed symbols that are given symbolic
meaning by the way an author uses them in a literary work, as the white whale
becomes a symbol of evil in Moby Dick.
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