1:00
en
CR
Foulcher
25
Alliteration: Repetition of a consonant sound.
Assonance: Repetition of a vowel sound.
Irony: A tool often used by composers that relies upon having two audiences. It can be cosmic, dramatic, situational or socratic.
Poetry: Foulcher hated this in school.
15: Foulcher was this age when he wrote his first poem
Abacus beads: Foulcher compares cars to these objects in his poem Summer Rain.
Bruised: What does the dirt do to the children in Summer Rain.
Wrench: Foulcher uses this somewhat aggressive word to describe the way the driver directs his attention away from the road.
Swamp Lands: These are dead and ugly yet beautiful due to the way mist can hide their ugliness.
Harry Wood: This poem was set during the Great Depression.
Twenties: The age Harry Wood was in when he got a foreman's place.
Metaphor: The name of the poetic technique used in the line, "digging his way out of poverty."
Violence: Summer Rain looks at different expressions of this in society.
Finding: This verb shows Harry Wood had initiative.
Verbs: In the first section of the poem these are aggressive and vigourous. These are important throughout the poem.
For the Fire: This poem explores the underlying violence in the natural world.
Gathering: Used in the first stanza, this word is present participle of a verb.
Thud: this word is onomatopoeic and is used to show the presence of humans in the woods.
Aural Images: Foulcher uses language techniques to create these in the first half of For the Fire.
Mood: " No one is there" and "sparse leaves/like clockwork" signal a change in the__________ of the poem.
Tone: The series of repeated hard consonant sounds such as k, b and d make this aggressive and harsh.
Grenade: Martin brings this object to school to share with the class.
Bleak: The narrator describes Martin's dad's skill using this work.
Oxymoron: " the small war..."
Power: A key word in the third stanza of Martin and the Hand Grenade. This word is also an important theme explored in the poem.
Figurative Language: "above the desk trenches: the dead weapon hurls across mind fields..."
Foulcher
Across:3. | Repetition of a consonant sound. | 8. | " the small war..." | 11. | Summer Rain looks at different expressions of this in society. | 13. | Foulcher compares cars to these objects in his poem Summer Rain. | 17. | A key word in the third stanza of Martin and the Hand Grenade. This word is also an important theme explored in the poem. | 19. | The narrator describes Martin's dad's skill using this work. | 20. | Foulcher uses this somewhat aggressive word to describe the way the driver directs his attention away from the road. | 22. | Foulcher uses language techniques to create these in the first half of For the Fire. | 23. | In the first section of the poem these are aggressive and vigourous. These are important throughout the poem. | 24. | "above the desk trenches: the dead weapon hurls across mind fields..." |
| | Down:1. | This poem was set during the Great Depression. | 2. | This poem explores the underlying violence in the natural world. | 4. | The age Harry Wood was in when he got a foreman's place. | 5. | Foulcher hated this in school. | 6. | " No one is there" and "sparse leaves/like clockwork" signal a change in the__________ of the poem. | 7. | Repetition of a vowel sound. | 9. | What does the dirt do to the children in Summer Rain. | 10. | The name of the poetic technique used in the line, "digging his way out of poverty." | 12. | Used in the first stanza, this word is present participle of a verb. | 14. | These are dead and ugly yet beautiful due to the way mist can hide their ugliness. | 15. | Martin brings this object to school to share with the class. | 16. | This verb shows Harry Wood had initiative. | 18. | this word is onomatopoeic and is used to show the presence of humans in the woods. | 21. | A tool often used by composers that relies upon having two audiences. It can be cosmic, dramatic, situational or socratic. | 25. | The series of repeated hard consonant sounds such as k, b and d make this aggressive and harsh. |
| |
© 2015
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
Foulcher
Across:3. | Repetition of a consonant sound. | 8. | " the small war..." | 11. | Summer Rain looks at different expressions of this in society. | 13. | Foulcher compares cars to these objects in his poem Summer Rain. | 17. | A key word in the third stanza of Martin and the Hand Grenade. This word is also an important theme explored in the poem. | 19. | The narrator describes Martin's dad's skill using this work. | 20. | Foulcher uses this somewhat aggressive word to describe the way the driver directs his attention away from the road. | 22. | Foulcher uses language techniques to create these in the first half of For the Fire. | 23. | In the first section of the poem these are aggressive and vigourous. These are important throughout the poem. | 24. | "above the desk trenches: the dead weapon hurls across mind fields..." |
| | Down:1. | This poem was set during the Great Depression. | 2. | This poem explores the underlying violence in the natural world. | 4. | The age Harry Wood was in when he got a foreman's place. | 5. | Foulcher hated this in school. | 6. | " No one is there" and "sparse leaves/like clockwork" signal a change in the__________ of the poem. | 7. | Repetition of a vowel sound. | 9. | What does the dirt do to the children in Summer Rain. | 10. | The name of the poetic technique used in the line, "digging his way out of poverty." | 12. | Used in the first stanza, this word is present participle of a verb. | 14. | These are dead and ugly yet beautiful due to the way mist can hide their ugliness. | 15. | Martin brings this object to school to share with the class. | 16. | This verb shows Harry Wood had initiative. | 18. | this word is onomatopoeic and is used to show the presence of humans in the woods. | 21. | A tool often used by composers that relies upon having two audiences. It can be cosmic, dramatic, situational or socratic. | 25. | The series of repeated hard consonant sounds such as k, b and d make this aggressive and harsh. |
| |
© 2015
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only