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| How They Brought the Good News for Ghent to Aix |
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| The Death of the Hired Man |
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| The Ballad of the Harp-Weaver |
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| The Deacon's Masterpiece, or the Woderful "One-Hoss Shay": A Logical Story |
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| Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
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| The Inspiratoin of Mr. Budd |
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| Leiningen versus the Ants |
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| I Like to See It Lap the Miles |
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| It Sifts from Leaden Sieves |
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| The Folly of Being Comforted |
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| Of the Imitation of Christ |
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| The Practice of the Presence of God |
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| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow |
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| Hinds' Feet on High Places |
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| The Pied Piper of Hamelin |
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| The Destruction of Sennacherib |
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| George Gordon, Lord Byron |
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| Which Author is considered the greatest of all German dramatists? |
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| Johann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller |
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| Who was the leader of the Irish Renaissance and was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 1923? |
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| Who was a German poet, novelist, and essayist, who won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1946? |
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| Which author's works were not popular until his/her death |
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| Which author was a German romantic writer from a Jewish family? |
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| Which Author was a German novelist, poet and playwrite who was considered one of the greatest writers of the world? |
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| Johann Wolfgang von Goeth |
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| Which Virginian poet wrote briliant poems with an eerie quality; one of the best story tellers. |
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| The most popular American poet of the 1800s |
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| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow |
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| Perfected the dramatic monolog |
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| A Scottish poet who is best known for his historical novels |
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| An unstressed sylable followed by a stressed |
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| A stressed sylable followed by an unstressed |
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| An unstressed followed by another unstressed followed by a stressed |
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| A stressed sylable followed by an unstressed followed by another unstressed |
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| A stressed sylable followed by another stressed |
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| The pattern in a line of poetry consisting of one accented syllagle and one or two unaccented syllables |
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| The recurrence of sound or motion |
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| A soft, smooth, or pleasant effect |
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| A rough, harsh, unpleasant effect |
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| The use of initial consonant or vowel sounds that are the same |
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| The repetition of final consonant sounds |
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| The repetition of like vowel sounds followed by unlike consonants |
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| The repetition of the stressed vowel sound and all succeeding sounds in words which come at the ends of lines of poetry |
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| Repetition within the same line of poetry |
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| Words which are not true rhymes but sometimes sound similar |
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| When only one syllable of the words rhymes |
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| When two or more syllables of the words rhyme |
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| Using words which sound like what they mean |
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| A narrative or description in which the characters, places, and other items are symbols |
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| The manner in which the writer deals with his subject and the general effedt is is meant to have on its audience |
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| An English novelist and playwright who won the Order of Merit and the Nobel Prize for Liturature |
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| Addressing an inanimate object as if it were alive or adressing an absent person as if he were present |
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| Has meaning in itself but also represents something beyond itself |
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| The use of words which appeal to the senses |
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| A short narrative song written in stanzas |
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