That was Rhetorical
Unique Techniques
Illusion to an Allusion
What’s the Point?
What do you mean by that?
100

”I crawl like an ant in mourning”

Simile

100

Poetry that doesn't use any strict meter or rhyme scheme

Freeverse

100

The statue that stood at the harbor of Rhodes, Greece. Also the name sake of the poem.

Colossus of Rhodes

100

Admitting defeat the writer tries to put the statue back together.

The writer never got to fully know their father and tries to gather a complete memory of someone they never knew very well.

100

A longitudinal structure along the centerline at the bottom of a vessel's hull. To turn over on its side.

Keel

200

“My hours are married to shadow”

Metaphor

200

A literary technique not used in stanzas 1-3, but is used in stanzas 4-6

Enjambment

200

The center of day to day life in Ancient Rome; used as an allusion to how the writer feels about their fathers death.

The Roman Forum

200

The colossus itself; both physical and non-physical

The writers father and memory of the father

200

Brief, forceful, and meaningful in expression; full of vigor, substance, or meaning

Pithy

300

A literary technique used across the entire poem that relates the colossus statue to the writers father.

Extended Metaphor

300

A poetic form or stanza that contains five lines

Quintain or Quintet

300

A trilogy of Greek tragedies written by Aeschylus in the 5th century BCE; Alluding to a daughter mourning her father’s death.

The Oresteia

300

How the writer ends the poem; what the metaphor actually means

The writer ends the poem by coming to terms that they will never truely remember the whole their father and become content with what they have.

300

Dealing with sexual matters in a comical way; humorously indecent.

Bawdy