Across
- 4. a poem treating to shepherds and rustic life
- 5. I am the most Greek of all the gods.
- 8. the use of unharmonious sounds in close conjunction to create effect
- 10. using people to get what you want (Foster)
- 15. overstatement or gross exaggeration for rhetorical effect
- 16. I kill Priam.
- 18. I taunted Leto and suffered for it.
- 20. breaking bread together symbolizes (Foster)
- 27. the vantage point from which the writer tells the story
- 28. a figure of speech in which someone is absent but is directly addressed as though present
- 29. this theory concerns itself with money and power
- 31. French verse form consisting of 19 lines and a prescribed rhyme scheme
- 33. I am the first woman.
- 34. This theory traces the universal patterns found in literary
- 36. I am very clever and always come up with a plan.
- 37. I turned too quickly and lost my wife.
- 38. an intentional understatement for humorous or satiric effect
- 39. I exchanged places with Prometheus.
- 42. I make my father grant my wish.
- 43. ironically, ___ allows characters to see more clearly (Foster)
- 45. the carrying over to nature the moods and passions of a human being
- 48. continuation of the sense and grammatical construction of a line on to the next verse or couplet
- 50. I ferry the dead to the underworld.
- 51. a 39 lined, unrhymed poem which incorporates a fixed set of end-words
- 52. pretending to say nothing about something one goes on to say quite a bit
- 58. The river of unbreakable oaths.
- 60. part signifies the whole
- 62. My rage begins the Iliad.
- 63. we look at this to symbolize the cycle (Foster)
- 64. I fly to close to the sun.
- 67. tells the story of the fall of Troy
- 68. This theory looks at the depiction of women in literature
Down
- 1. the name one thing represents something else with which it’s associated
- 2. external imperfections mirror internal imperfections (Foster)
- 3. a statement that seems self-contradictory, but is nevertheless true
- 6. I detain Odysseus for seven years.
- 7. I have a face that’ll turn you to stone.
- 9. The river of fire in the underworld.
- 11. an address to a deity for aid
- 12. water imagery can indicate this (Foster)
- 13. a three-lined stanza
- 14. With one look, my wife betrays me.
- 17. I swallowed a rock.
- 19. unrhymed iambic pentameter
- 21. Man, I love myself.
- 22. a stanza pattern consisting of 8 iambic pentameter lines rhyming abababcc
- 23. represent sacrifice, redemption, and hope (Foster)
- 24. pattern of stressed sounds consisting of five feet of an unstressed and stressed syllable
- 25. this theory looks at the text and only the text
- 26. I use her, marry her, and leave her for another.
- 27. this theory looks at how our unconscious was influenced by childhood events
- 30. the use of a word in a figurative sense
- 32. an understatement in which a thing is affirmed by stating the opposite
- 35. I carry the caduceus.
- 40. a speaker or writer’s choice of words
- 41. he tale of one man’s journey home to his family
- 44. a 14 line poem with meter and rhyme
- 46. repetition of one or more initial consonant sounds in a group of words.
- 47. I was first before anything else.
- 49. I created horses for man.
- 53. heart disease is never heart disease (Foster)
- 54. My funeral ends the Trojan War.
- 55. We are the first generation of gods.
- 56. I am Priam’s daughter and no one ever listens to me.
- 57. poetry that lacks regular metrical and rhyme patterns
- 59. I am to Juliet as Pyramus is to Romeo.
- 61. The first written record of Greece.
- 65. birds often relate to freedom (Foster)
- 66. a search for something of great value (Foster)
