Glossary of Literary Terms
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caesura: A sign, used in scansion, that marks a natural pause in speaking a line of poetry.
concrete poetry: An attempt to supplement (or replace) verbal meaning with visual devices from painting and sculpture. A true concrete poem cannot be spoken; it is viewed, not read (compare pattern poetry).
confessional poem: A relatively new (or recently defined) kind of poetry in which the speaker focuses on the poet´s own psychic biography. This label is often applied to writings of Robert Lowell, Sylvia Plath, and Anne Sexton.
connotation: What is suggested by a word, apart from what it explicitly and directly describes (compare denotation). For example, the "cypresses" of Eavan Boland´s "That the Science of Cartography Is Limited" (1994) connote death, because of their traditional associations with mourning.
controlling metaphors: Metaphors that dominate or organize an entire poem. For example, metaphors of movement structure John Donne´s "A Valediction Forbidding Mourning" (1633).
conventions: Standard ways of saying things in verse, employed to achieve certain expected effects. Conventions may pertain to style (e.g., the rhyme scheme of the sonnet) or content (e.g., the figure of the shepherd in the pastoral).
couplet: A pair of lines, almost always rhyming, that form a unit.






