Relier Pairs Figurative LanguageVersion en ligne Match the example to the type of figurative language present. par Val Allison 1 I heard a cry in the night,A thousand miles it came,It was quiet then it was louder,My name, my name, my name… 2 As a white candleIn a holy place,So is the beautyOf an aged face. 3 Gazing at the apexstar configurationsred picnic blanketthe endless summer. 4 Gossiping on the country-side,Spring and the wandering breezes say,God has thrown Heaven open wideAnd let the thrushes out to-day. 5 The terrier, down on the hearth,Twitches and barks in his sleep,Soft little foolish barks,More like a dream than a dog . . . 6 Taking daughter’s boyfriend hostage may have been a bit extreme, But other fathers have done worse things when their daughters were sixteen. 7 You say that you are wronged--ah, well,I count that friendship poor, at bestA bauble, a mere bagatelle,That cannot stand so slight a test. 8 Nor will a brave man choose to live when he,Full deeply drunk of life, has reached the dregs. 9 Beautiful lie the dead;Like ships, the anchor dropped,In a deep water. 10 The soul selects her own society,Then shuts the door;On her divine majorityObtrude no more. Simile: an aged face was compared to a white candle using the word “as.” Personification: The soul is given the ability to select societies and shut doors. Simile: The dog is compared to a dream using the word “like.” Understatement: Taking one’s daughter’s boyfriend hostage is more than “a bit” extreme. Personification: Spring and the wandering breezes are given the ability to talk. Hyperbole: The speaker is exaggerating how loud the call was. Hyperbole: The summer is described as endless, which is an exaggeration. Metaphor: life is compared to a drink. The end of life is compared to the end of a drink, one with food particles in the bottom. Metaphor: He compares the friendship to a bauble or bagatelle, a cheap trinket. Simile: The dead are compared to ships with anchors dropped.