Literary Devices
Poetic Devices
Oedipus
What's Your Type?
Never enough poetry
100

This device directly addresses an absent person, abstract idea, or inanimate object — 

What is apostrophe?

100

A group of lines forming a unit within a poem — the poetic equivalent of a paragraph.

Stanza

100

This king of Thebes is determined to uncover the truth of his origins

Oedipus

100

This type of character undergoes a significant internal change over the course of a story — their beliefs, values, or personality shift because of what they experience.


Dynamic character

100

Repetition of vowel sounds within nearby words — "the rain in Spain stays mainly on the plain."

assonance

200

A writer deliberately downplays a serious situation — saying "just a scratch" after losing an arm.

Understatement

200

A fourteen-line poem with a prescribed rhyme scheme — Petrarchan and Shakespearean are the two main forms.

sonnet

200

This queen's calm unravels the moment she realizes the prophecy has already come true — and she acts before Oedipus does.

Jocasta

200

This character doesn't change. Their personality stays exactly the same from beginning to end, often serving a single defining trait or function.

Flat character

200

Repetition of consonant sounds within or at the end of nearby words, not just at the start.

consonance

300

A reference to a well-known text, historical event, or figure outside the work — calling someone "a modern Iago."

Allusion

300

Two consecutive rhyming lines of verse — often closes a Shakespearean sonnet.

couplet

300

This blind prophet sees everything the king cannot

Tiresias

300

This character exists to set the main story in motion — their action, arrival, or decision triggers the central conflict without necessarily being central themselves.

Catalyst character

300

A metrical foot of one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable — da-DUM.

iamb

400

A part stands in for the whole — "the White House announced" instead of "the president announced."

Synecdoche

400

Words that look like they rhyme due to shared spelling but actually sound different — "love" and "prove."

eye rhyme

400

This character walks the line between loyal brother-in-law and political rival — accused of conspiracy, he argues for reason over paranoia.

Creon

400

This character is deliberately contrasted with another to highlight qualities in both — their differences make each character's traits stand out more sharply

foil

400

Four iambic feet per line — da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM da-DUM.

Iambic tetrameter

500

A play on words that exploits double meanings for comic or rhetorical effect.

Pun

500

Repetition of the same consonant sound at the beginning of nearby words — "Peter Piper picked a peck."

alliteration

500

This collective voice of the play represents the moral and civic conscience of Thebes — they observe, question, and interpret events for the audience.

The Chorus

500

This character reflects the protagonist's own struggles, desires, or fears back at them — showing the main character who they could become or what they already are.

Mirror character

500

When a sentence runs past the end of a line into the next without punctuation, pulling the reader forward.

Enjambment

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