Sunday, October 3, 2010

Allegory in English Literature

Allegory has been derived from a Greek term "allos" meaning "disguise". So allegory suggests to describe a thing under disguise of another thing. It is an extended narrative in prose or poetry that delineates a story which has an inner meaning.

We can distinguish two main types: Historical and Political allegory, in which the characters and actions represent, or allegorize historical events, and the other one is, the Allegory of ideas, in which the literal characters represent abstract concepts and the plot exemplifies a doctrine or thesis. Another type of allegory symbolizes any religious issue. For example, Coleridge's "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" is a Christian allegory of guilt and redemption.

John Keats makes a subtle use of allegory throughout his ode, "To Autumn", most explicitly in the second stanza, which represents autumn personified as a female figure and the scenes and the activities of the harvest season. Thus, allegory is a powerful literary figure of speech used by the skillful writer to give a moral, religious, or satirical meaning.

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