Across
- 2. subject of topic of discourse of artistic representation.
- 6. character's words or actions are clear to the audience or reader although unknown to the character.
- 10. medieval narrative poem or tale, typically describing the downfall of a great man.
- 11. utterance of a character in a drama that has the form of a monologue or gives the illusion of being a series of unspoken reflections.
- 13. formation of word used to imitate a sound.
- 16. pair of successive lines of verse, especially a pair that rhyme and are the same length.
- 17. melodramatic, self-consistory suffering and has given himself up to the power of his mistress.
- 19. controversy; quarrel.
- 21. pattern used in poems, usually marked by letters.
- 22. poetic for in which a single character, addressing a silent auditor at a critical moment, reveals himself or herself and dramatic situations.
- 25. conversation between characters in novel drama, etc.
Down
- 1. term is applied to something to which it is not literally applicable in order to suggest a resemblance.
- 3. rhyme of the terminal syllables of lines of poetry.
- 4. when love is not returned.
- 5. usually a brief comment, rather than a speech, such as a monologue or soliloquy.
- 7. common water in poetry consisting of an unrhymed line with 5 ft. or accents, each foot containing an unaccented syllable and an accented syllable.
- 8. fancy, purely decorative article.
- 9. unrhymed verse, especially iambic pentameter most frequently used in dramatic English.
- 12. figure of speech comparing 2 unlike things that is often introduced by like or as.
- 14. humorous use of a word so as to emphasize different meanings.
- 15. 14 lines that are typically 5 ft. iambics rhyming according to a prescribed scheme.
- 18. introductory scene, preceding first act of play.
- 19. a group of actors or a single actor having a function similar to that of the Greek chorus, as in Elizabethan drama.
- 20. show or indicate beforehand; prefigure.
- 23. a figure of speech in which apparently contradictory terms appear in conjunction.
- 24. Foil character who contrast with another character their opposite.
