HostedBy Mr. Dittmer 100 200 400 300 400 Literary Movements Famous Authors Poetic Devices Back to Nature 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

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HostedBy Mr. Dittmer

Literary Movements Famous Authors Poetic Devices Back to Nature

Row 1, Col 1 This mode of thought dominates Classical and Neoclassical writing.

1,2 This unique, Romantic-era poet was almost entirely unpublished in her lifetime.

1,3 This device is present when Bryant claims that Nature “... has a voice of gladness, and a smile.”

1,4 Nature in the classical view represents a set of these.

2,1 Romantics valued this childish mode of creative thought.

2,2 This author was not a Romantic but did use nature to support his Puritanical religious views.

2,3 This device is present when Poe writes, “Brazen bells! / What a tale of terror, now, their turbulency tells!”

2,4 Both Jonathan Edwards and Walt Whitman examined the labors of this creature.

3,1 This body of works and group of Romantic writers of New England qualifies as a literary movement but not as a religion or philosophy.

3,2 He invented the detective story and even receives credit for developing the short story’s form.

3,3 Aside from rhyme, “Baking quick cupcakes took just two shakes” uses what sound device?

3,4 (precise word needed) This natural element allows Poe’s narrator to “reflect” on the setting of The House of Usher.

4,1 This sub-group of the Romantics saw transcendentalism and some Romanticism as too positive and optimistic.

4,2 This author lived alone in the woods in a hand-built cabin.

4,3 The following are examples of what figure of speech?: “The wheel in the sky keeps on turning.” “All we are is dust in the wind.”

4,4 While Emerson’s “Self Reliance” focused on the individual’s practical relationship to society, this other essay found Emerson “In the woods, … a transparent eyeball …”

5,1 This historical event in America is closely associated with the politics of Romanticism.

5,2 He sang a “song of himself,” but he also sang those of everyday Americans.

5,3 The “A” sound in “rare and radiant maiden whom the angels named Lenore” exemplifies this sound device.

5,4 Bryant’s “Thanatopsis” uses a stronger “return to the earth” argument than this Dickinson poem on the same subject.

Final This six-syllable, onomatopoeic neologism created by Poe imitates the sound of silver bells. Final Jeopardy: Sound Devices

Point of ViewAuthors’ Works Poetic Devices 2 Back to Nature

Row 1, Col 1 This point of view is almost never used in literature.

1,2 This title sarcastically shows Poe’s critics that he can write a story with a moral.

1,3 This device is present when Bryant claims that Nature “... has a voice of gladness, and a smile.”

1,4 Nature in the classical view represents a set of these.

2,1 This point of view uses a character in the story as the narrator.

2,2 Always cerebral, Dickinson felt a funeral in this organ.

2,3 This device is present when Poe writes, “Brazen bells! / What a tale of terror, now, their turbulency tells!”

2,4 Both Jonathan Edwards and Walt Whitman examined the labors of this creature.

3,1 When a third person narrator knows only one character’s thoughts and basically follows that character around, we say the narration is this.

3,2 Whitman catalogues the American workforce And exclaims, “I Hear This”

3,3 Aside from rhyme, “Baking quick cupcakes took just two shakes” uses what sound device?

3,4 (precise word needed) This natural element allows Poe’s narrator to “reflect” on the setting of The House of Usher.

4,1 This point of view reveals multiple characters’ thoughts and emotions.

4,2 This essay argues that despite earthquakes and weather, man is also a great antagonism to nature.

4,3 The following are examples of what figure of speech?: “The wheel in the sky keeps on turning.” “All we are is dust in the wind.”

4,4 While Emerson’s “Self Reliance” focused on the individual’s practical relationship to society, this other essay found Emerson “In the woods, … a transparent eyeball …”

5,1 A narrator who only relates facts and does not suggest opinions or subjective attitudes has this tone.

5,2 This poem features an avian intruder from the “Night’s Plutonian shore”

5,3 The “A” sound in “rare and radiant maiden whom the angels named Lenore” exemplifies this sound device.

5,4 Bryant’s “Thanatopsis” uses a stronger “return to the earth” argument than this Dickinson poem on the same subject.