The Poetry of Isabella Whitney Literary Elements

The Poetry of Isabella Whitney Literary Elements

Speaker or Narrator, and Point of View

Isabella Whitney, in the first-person and third-person.

Form and Meter

Regular and Iambic pentameter

Metaphors and Similes

Many of Whitney's poems focus on the recurring metaphor of female strength and power, which she portrays through the always hardworking birds in her poems.

Alliteration and Assonance

The use of 'Working Woman' and 'Leaving Lover' are perfect examples of alliteration in Isabella Whitney's poems.

Irony

The irony of the weak man running off when a child is born is present in her poetry.

Genre

Autobiographical romance poetry

Setting

England in the 1600s.

Tone

Dramatic and romantic

Protagonist and Antagonist

Whitney is the protagonist, her ex-lover is the antagonist.

Major Conflict

The major conflict of the poems occurs when Whitney first moves to London and gains her independence from her family.

Climax

The climax of the poetry is reached when Isabella falls pregnant and her lover leaves her for another woman, whom he marries.

Foreshadowing

The strength the Whitney has is foreshadowed by her strong upbringing.

Understatement

The role of female sexuality and pleasure is understated throughout her poetry.

Allusions

The poems allude to the changing positions of women at the time, and their gaining of independence.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

The sturdy oak tree is a metonym for the stability that Whitney's family provide her when she returned home.

Personification

Isabella Whitney is personified through the hard-working birds that she includes in her poems.

Hyperbole

N/A

Onomatopoeia

N/A

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