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invocation
(redirected from conjury)

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invocation

Literary device in which a power external to the poem or story is called upon for assistance. Often this is a call to the gods to help with the composition of a poem and is usually placed at the beginning of the work. Common in ancient Greek and Roman literature, it was revived during the Renaissance. Later writers were less respectful and mocked the convention, as does the English poet Lord Byron in his long poem Don Juan (1819-24).


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Any photograph is a trick, after all--a conjury of optics and a chemical reaction, which happens below the threshold of sight.
 
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