Fall 2013

1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950515253545556575859606162636465666768697071727374757677
Across
  1. 4. I am the reason Gatsby moves to the Eggs.
  2. 5. Only character in Hamlet not killed by poison.
  3. 7. I swallowed a rock.
  4. 9. a 14 line poem with meter and rhyme
  5. 10. I taunted Leto and suffered for it.
  6. 13. I turned too quickly and lost my wife.
  7. 14. the name one thing represents something else with which it’s associated
  8. 15. a figure of speech in which someone is absent but is directly addressed as though present
  9. 17. With one look, my wife betrays me.
  10. 20. I am the first woman.
  11. 21. an address to a deity for aid
  12. 22. Where Nick meets Myrtle.
  13. 24. a type of fiction that teaches a specific lesson
  14. 25. The river of fire in the underworld.
  15. 26. pretending to say nothing about something one goes on to say quite a bit
  16. 27. an understatement in which a thing is affirmed by stating the opposite
  17. 29. the vantage point from which the writer tells the story
  18. 30. This critic employs Freudian methods of analysis.
  19. 31. This critic focuses on archetypes.
  20. 32. I have a face that’ll turn you to stone.
  21. 36. Hamlet and Horatio
  22. 37. pattern of stressed sounds consisting of five feet of an unstressed and stressed syllable
  23. 39. an intentional understatement for humorous or satiric effect
  24. 42. I carry the caduceus.
  25. 43. This type of critic considers the author’s background and time period.
  26. 45. I was first before anything else.
  27. 47. One thing that Jordan is known to do
  28. 48. My funeral ends the Trojan War.
  29. 49. I detain Odysseus for seven years.
  30. 52. I own a garage.
  31. 54. opening a story in the middle of the action
  32. 60. a stanza pattern consisting of 8 iambic pentameter lines rhyming abababcc
  33. 63. I exchanged places with Prometheus.
  34. 64. the use of a word in a figurative sense
  35. 67. I own a coffee shop and see the accident.
  36. 68. unrhymed iambic pentameter
  37. 69. The river of unbreakable oaths.
  38. 71. My words fly up, my thoughts remain below; Words without thoughts never to heaven go.
  39. 73. a 39 lined, unrhymed poem which incorporates a fixed set of end-words
  40. 75. a three-lined stanza
  41. 76. What a piece of work is a man!
  42. 77. a poem treating to shepherds and rustic life
Down
  1. 1. The first written record of Greece.
  2. 2. I kill Priam.
  3. 3. I attend Gatsby’s funeral and love his library.
  4. 6. This critic believes that Western culture is pervasively patriarchal.
  5. 8. I use her, marry her, and leave her for another.
  6. 9. part signifies the whole
  7. 11. The lady doth protest too much, me thinks.
  8. 12. overstatement or gross exaggeration for rhetorical effect
  9. 16. the carrying over to nature the moods and passions of a human being
  10. 18. Man, I love myself.
  11. 19. poetry that lacks regular metrical and rhyme patterns
  12. 22. repetition of one or more initial consonant sounds in a group of words.
  13. 23. This critic looks from an economic standpoint.
  14. 28. We are the first generation of gods.
  15. 31. I have an affair with Tom.
  16. 33. a statement that seems self-contradictory, but is nevertheless true
  17. 34. use of some unexpected and improbable incident to make things turn out right
  18. 35. French verse form consisting of 19 lines and a prescribed rhyme scheme
  19. 38. I ferry the dead to the underworld.
  20. 40. I fly to close to the sun.
  21. 41. With her marriage, Gertrude has committed what sin?
  22. 44. the use of unharmonious sounds in close conjunction to create effect
  23. 46. What Hamlet calls “The Murder of Gonzago.”
  24. 50. Ultimately, this is what Claudius wanted.
  25. 51. I created horses for man.
  26. 53. I am the narrator and Gatsby’s friend.
  27. 55. Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.
  28. 56. the unknotting
  29. 57. I am the most Greek of all the gods.
  30. 58. continuation of the sense and grammatical construction of a line on to the next verse or couplet
  31. 59. My rage begins the Iliad.
  32. 61. Age of Pammy, Tom & Daisy’s daughter.
  33. 62. I am very clever and always come up with a plan.
  34. 65. I make my father grant my wish.
  35. 66. I am Priam’s daughter and no one ever listens to me.
  36. 70. a word or phrase that has become lifeless due to overuse
  37. 72. a speaker or writer’s choice of words
  38. 74. I am to Juliet as Pyramus is to Romeo.