what are the poetic devices in a legend of the north land?
Answers
Explanation:
Poetic devices in Phoebe Cary's ballad "A Legend of the Northland" include simile, alliteration, apostrophe, dialogue, repetition, punning, polysyndeton, and imagery...
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Answer
Following are the literary devices/figures of speech used in the poem A Legend of the Northland:
Simile:
It is a poetic device which involves the comparison of one thing with another thing of a different kind using “as” or “like”. In this poem, we find a lot of example of simile. e.g. “the children look like bear’s cubs”, “baked it thin as a wafer”, “you shall build as the birds do”, “Black as a coal in the flame”.
Alliteration:
It is the repetition of the same sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words. e.g. “That they cannot sleep them through”, “To the sledges, when it snows”, “In their funny, furry clothes”, “They tell them a curious story”, “yet you may learn a lesson”, ” If I tell the tale to you” etc.
Enjambment:
It is the continuation of a line after the line breaks. In this poem, several sentences continue to next lines. e.g. “Once, when the good Saint Peter Lived in the world below, And walked about it, preaching, Just as he did, you know, He came to the door of a cottage, In travelling round the earth, Where a little woman was making cakes, And baking them on the hearth“.
Repetition:
b It is the repetition of a word or phrase of poetic effect. e.g. “Away, away in the Northland”, “And rolled and rolled it flat;”, “By boring, and boring, and boring,” etc...
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