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It refers to the body of work written or spoken in the English language. It includes prose, poetry, and oral traditions.
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The most popular is the epic poem "Beowulf." It was originally a spoken poem passed through generations of Anglo-Saxons. Perhaps the most surprising thing about these early British works is their graphic content and crude sexual content.
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Rhetoric figure of diction that consists of the repetition of one or more sounds within the same word or phrase.
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Name of the period which lasted from the mid-1800s to the beginning of the twentieth century, includes the love poems of Elizabeth and Robert Browning,.
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Name of the period where authors wrote about life, love and nature. Many of these authors found the world to be disappointing and had a melancholy bent to their works
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Poetic composition formed by fourteen verses of major art, generally hendecasyllabic, and consonant rhyme, which are distributed in two quartets and two tercets.
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Science that deals with inventorying, classifying and analyzing the different types of poems in a specific language.
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is the repetition of a sequence of phonemes from the tonic syllable at the end of two or more verses. The rhyme is established from the last vowel