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  1. A complication is the part of a tragic plot that includes everything from the beginning of the play up to the point of the change of fortune. A tragedy must have both complication and resolution, and a complication can even occur outside the events of a play, such as action that occurs before the play starts but has bearing on the plot.

  2. Assonance: the repetition of similar vowel sounds followed by different consonant sounds in words that are close together. Example: “My words like silent raindrops fell…” (Paul Simon, “Sounds of Silence”). Example: “Thou foster child of silence and slow time” (John Keats, “Ode to a Grecian Urn”).

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  3. It is the issue/problem in a narrative around which the whole story revolves. Conflicts can exist between individual characters, between groups of characters, between a character and society, between a character and nature, and it can also be abstract (conflicting ideas).

  4. This paper discusses potential ways in which common language used in musical discourse may be applied in conversations relating to poetry, and, to further these thoughts, explores how one may use ideas relating to traditional music composition when approaching the composition of poetry. Download Free PDF. View PDF.

  5. Poetry may be written independently, as discrete poems, or may occur in conjunction with other arts, as in poetic drama, hymns or lyrics. Poetry, and discussions of it, have a long history. Early attempts to define poetry, such as Aristotle's Poetics, focused on the uses of speech in rhetoric, drama, song and comedy.

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  6. Both evocation and exposition are essential to effective poetic communication. When crafting poems, poets evoke and expose meaning, in part, by means of the following Poetic Elements: Music – Meaningful poems are pleasing to the ear. Poets use Sound Devices to interpose music into their poems.

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  8. Complication An intensification of the conflict in a story or play. Complication builds up, accumulates, and develops the primary or central conflict in a literary work. Frank O'Connor's story "Guests of the Nation" provides a striking example, as does Ralph Ellison's "Battle Royal." Conflict