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imagery

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imagery

Use of metaphor, simile, and other figures of speech to create a visual picture to stimulate the imagination and the senses, often helping the reader to experience a situation more vividly; this includes the use of symbols and picture-words, and descriptive language, such as the use of adjectives and adverbs. The aim is to clarify or explain.

Images help readers experience a situation more vividly because they turn abstract language into concrete ‘visuals’. Imagery is the major descriptive tool for both poets and writers of prose. Imagism, a movement in Anglo-American poetry in the early 20th century, had a profound impact on modern and contemporary poetry, since it rejected many traditional poetic devices in favour of images. Ezra Pound's ‘In a Station of the Metro’ (1913) is regarded as an example of a poem of ‘pure image’.



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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
What remains of his verse mostly takes the form of quatrains, yet for originality of thought, wealth of imagery and style, they have seldom been excelled.
The poem of [98] "Resolution and Independence" is a storehouse of such records; for its fulness of lovely imagery it may be compared to Keats's "Saint Agnes' Eve.
He is the man who watches the growth of the cable - a sailor's phrase which has all the force, precision, and imagery of technical language that, created by simple men with keen eyes for the real aspect of the things they see in their trade, achieves the just expression seizing upon the essential, which is the ambition of the artist in words.
 
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