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    Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

    Ministry of Higher Education

    Umm Al-Qura UniversityCollege of Arts and Management Sciences

    Department of English

    Parallelism in Selected Childrens Poems

    by Eloise Greenfield: A Stylistic Study

    A thesis submitted to the department of English in partial

    fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of M.A. in

    Linguistics

    Presented by

    Aisha Saadi AL-SubhiTeacher's Assistant in Department of EnglishCollege of Arts and Management Sciences

    Umm Al-Qura University

    Supervised by

    Dr. Shadia Yousef Saadu-Ldeen Banjar

    Assistant Professor of LinguisticsCollege of Education- Humanities

    King Abdul-Aziz University

    Second Semester

    1429-1430 H / 2008- 2009 A.D.

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    ABSTRACTThe present study is mainly stylistic and exclusively concentrates on the linguistic

    analysis of parallelism as a stylistic device in Eloise Greenfield children's poetry. It

    adopts a stylistic formalist approach that emphasizes the formal structures of a literarytext on different linguistic levels. It examines sound parallelism, grammatical

    parallelism, and lexical/semantic parallelism in a corpus of twenty- five poems selected

    from illustrious works of Eloise Greenfield's poetry. Each type is detected in the selected

    poems, and then stylistically analyzed according to the patterns of parallelism in order to

    illustrate how parallelism creates unexpected effects upon the readers.

    The results of the study confirm the prominent existence of parallelism as

    foregrounded regularities on the three linguistic levels: phonological, grammatical, and

    semantic. They also show that the effect of parallelism varies according to the type of

    parallelism. Furthermore, the study has recorded variations of parallelisms on the threelinguistic levels. On the phonological level, sound parallelism plays a dominant role over

    other types of parallelism in the poems. It constitutes 48% out of all parallelisms. Rhyme

    is the most frequently used pattern. Specifically, masculine rhyme and full rhyme are

    predominant, whereas broken rhyme is completely absent. Alliteration of the

    approximant /w/ and the fricative // are the mostly used sound patterns, whereas

    alliteration of the affricate /d/ is rare. Assonance of diphthongs has dominance over

    assonance of long and short vowels. Moreover, consonant parallels of the plosives /t/ &

    /d/ are used more in comparison with other consonant parallels. On the grammatical

    level, grammatical parallelism accomplishes a similar statue to sound parallelism andscores 40% of all parallelisms. Morphological parallelism is less used than syntactic

    parallelism. On the morphological level, parallel nouns and verbs are more frequently

    used than adjectives, adverbs, and pronouns. On the syntactic level, parallel noun phrases

    are the most frequent type. In addition, the declarative type of parallel constructions is

    the dominant type, whereas exclamatory type is the least used. Not surprisingly, simple

    parallel constructions are the prevailing used structure, whereas complex-compound

    constructions are totally missing. Moreover, isocolon is the dominant pattern of

    grammatical parallelism. On the semantic level, lexical/semantic parallelism shows a

    much lesser existence with only 12% of all parallelisms. Hyponymous parallels show the

    highest frequency. In addition, anaphoric parallelism is the prevailing pattern, whereasemblematic parallelism is the absent pattern. Interestingly, most of the patterns of

    lexical/semantic parallelism stand in contrast to one another. The overall results have

    shown that parallelism activates on different linguistic levels simultaneously. Thus,

    parallelism operates as a foregrounding device showing the regularities of sounds, words,

    and structures that characterize the style of Eloise Greenfield.

    Finally, this study hopes to pave the way for future avenues of investigations in the

    world of children's literature under the category of stylistics.

    Student: Supervisor: Dean of College:

    Aisha Sa'adi AL-Subhi Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar Dr. Anjab Ghulam Nabi Gutbaldeen

    II

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    III

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    Table of ContentsPage

    Abstract..... II

    Acknowledgements...Iv

    Table of contents...vI

    List of Abbreviations...XIII

    List of tables...XIV

    List of figures.XIX

    Introduction

    0.0. Introduction...1

    0.1. Organization of the Study..3

    0.2. Statements of the Problem4

    0.3. Reasons for Choosing the Topic..4

    0.4. Objectives of the Study...5

    0.5. Significance of the Study...6

    0.6. Limitations of the Study.6

    0.7. Review of literature....7

    0.8. Data and Methodology..13

    0.9. Children's Poetry14

    0.10. Eloise Greenfield: The Poet...16

    VI

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    Chapter One: Stylistics and the Notion of Parallelism

    1.0. Introduction26

    1.1. Style and Stylistics...26

    1.2. Schools of Stylistics34

    1.2.1. Formalist Stylistics .....37

    1.2.2. Foregrounding Theory....38

    1.3. The Notion of Parallelism...

    42

    1.4. The Difference between Parallelism and Repetition46

    1.5. The Rule of Parallelism.47

    1.6. Types of Parallelism.51

    Chapter Two: Sound Parallelism

    2.0. Introduction.. 55

    2.1. Sound Parallelism... 55

    2.2. Sound Parallelism in the Selected Poems ....57

    2.3. Patterns of Sound Parallelism in the Selected Poems..67

    2.3.1. Rhyme....... 67

    2.3.1.1. Full Rhyme.... 68

    2.3.1.2. Imperfect Rhyme....72

    2.3.1.3. Identical Rhyme..73

    2.3.1.4. Internal Rhyme.....74

    2.3.1.5. Eye Rhyme ...75

    VII

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    2.3.1.6. Masculine Rhyme...........................................................................................75

    2.3.1.7. Feminine Rhyme.............................................................................................79

    802.3.1.8. Triple Rhyme.

    81 2.3.1.9. Broken Rhyme ..

    2.3.2. Alliteration....83

    2.3.2.1. Alliteration of the Voiced Bilabial Plosive /b/....84

    2.3.2.2. Alliteration of the Voiceless Alveolar Plosive /t/.....85

    2.3.2.3. Alliteration of the Voiced Alveolar Plosive /d/..........86

    2.3.2.4. Alliteration of the Voiceless Velar Plosive /k/....86

    2.3.2.5. Alliteration of the Voiceless Labiodental Fricative /f/..............87

    2.3.2.6. Alliteration of the Voiced Dental Fricative //.87

    2.3.2.7. Alliteration of the Voiceless Alveolar Fricative /s/......88

    2.3.2.8. Alliteration of the Glottal Fricative /h/...............89

    2.3.2.9. Alliteration of the Voiced Bilabial Nasal /m/.......................90

    2.3.2.10. Alliteration of the Voiced Alveolar Lateral /l/......91

    2.3.2.11. Alliteration of the Voiced Alveolar Approximant / r/ ..91

    2.3.2.12. Alliteration of the Voiced Velar Approximant /w/.92

    2.3.2.13. Alliteration of the Voiced Alveo-Palatal affricate /d/.......93

    2.3.3. Assonance..... 97

    2.3.3.1. Assonance of Short Vowels.........98

    a. Assonance of the Short Vowel / /..........99

    b. Assonance of the Short Vowel /e/..100

    VIII

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    c. Assonance of the Short Vowel // ........101

    d. Assonance of the Short Vowel / /......102

    e. Assonance of the Short Vowel / /.......103

    f. Assonance of the Short Vowel / /....103

    2.3.3.2. Assonance of Long Vowels.......104

    a. Assonance of the Long Vowel /

    i /..........104

    b. Assonance of the Long Vowel

    / /..........105

    c. Assonance of the Long Vowel

    / /......105

    d. Assonance of the Long Vowel

    / /..................105

    e. Assonance of the Long Vowel

    /u /..............106

    2.3.3.3. Assonance of Diphthongs.......107

    a. Assonance of the Diphthong /e

    /.....107

    b. Assonance of the Diphthong

    /a /......108

    c. Assonance of the Diphthong

    / /......110

    d. Assonance of the Diphthong /a /....110

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    e. Assonance of the Diphthong / /....111

    f. Assonance of the Diphthong /e/ 111

    2.3.4. Consonance...... 114

    2.3.4.1. Consonance of the Alveolar Fricatives /s/ - /z/.....115

    2.3.4.2. Consonance of the Alveo-Palatal Fricative / / & the Affricate /t /...117

    2.3.4.3. Consonance of the Alveolar Plosives /t/ & /d/....118

    2.3.4.4. Consonance of the Nasals /m/ -/ n / - // .......120

    2.3.4.5. Consonance of the Alveolar Approximant /r/..121

    2.3.4.6. Consonance of the Voiced Alveolar Lateral /l/.......121

    2.4.The Effect of Sound Parallelism in the Selected Poems.125

    Chapter Three: Grammatical Parallelism

    3.0. Introduction...136

    3.1. Grammatical Parallelism... 136

    3.2. Grammatical Parallelism in the Selected Poems....138

    3.2.1. Morphological Parallelism...138

    3.2.1.1. Parallel Nouns.........................................................................................139

    3.2.1.2. Parallel Verbs..141

    3.2.1.3. Parallel Adverbs...144

    3.2.1.4. Parallel Adjectives..........................144

    3.2.1.5. Parallel Pronouns.146

    3.2.2. Syntactic Parallelism.......150

    3.2.2.1. Syntactic Parallelism on the Phrase Level...150

    3.2.2.2. Syntactic Parallelism on the Sentence Level...153

    X

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    3.2.2.2.1. Simple Declarative Parallel Sentences ...155

    3.2.2.2.2. Simple Negative Parallel Sentences.157

    3.2.2.2.3. Simple Interrogative Parallel Sentences..........157

    3.2.2.2.4. Simple Exclamatory Parallel Sentences.....158

    3.2.2.2.5. Simple Imperative Parallel Sentences........................158

    3.2.2.2.6. Compound Declarative Parallel Sentences....159

    3.2.2.2.7. Compound Negative Parallel Sentences..160

    3.2.2.2.8. Complex Declarative Parallel Sentences.....161

    3.2.2.2.9. Complex Iinterrogative Parallel Sentences......161

    3.2.2.2.10. Complex Imperative Parallel Sentences..162

    3.3. Patterns of Grammatical Parallelism in the Selected Poems...164

    3.3.1. Antithesis.................164

    3.3.2. Chiasmus..165

    3.3.3. Isocolon Parallelism......166

    3.3.4. Tricolon Parallelism..169

    3.3.5. Climax....... 171

    3.3.6. Ellipsis.......... 172

    3.4. The Effect of Grammatical Parallelism in the Selected Poems....175

    Chapter Four: Lexical/Semantic Parallelism

    4.0. Introduction...194

    4.1. Lexical/Semantic Parallelism ........ 194

    4.2. Lexical/Semantic Parallelism in the Selected Poems .......196

    XI

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    4.2.1. Synonymous Parallel Lexical Items .........196

    4.2.2. Antonymous Parallel Lexical Items..........197

    4.2.3. Hyponymous Parallel Lexical Items.........198

    4.2.4. Meronymic Parallel Lexical Items.........199

    4.2.5. Paronymic Parallel Lexical Items.......200

    4.2.6. Connotative Parallel Lexical Items...201

    4.3. Patterns of Lexical/Semantic Parallelism......204

    4.3.1. Synonymous Parallelism.......204

    4.3.2. Antithetical Parallelism....209

    4.3.3. Zeugma...212

    4.3.4. Diazeugma....215

    4.3.5. Anaphoric Parallelism....219

    4.3.6. Epistrophic Parallelism..221

    4.3.7. Polysyndeton..222

    4.3.8. Asyndeton......... 223

    4.3.9. Syncrisis......... 224

    4.3.10.

    Synthetic Parallelism.........225

    4.3.11.Introverted Parallelism......... 226

    4.3.12.Emblematic Parallelism......227

    4.4. The Effect of Lexical/Semantic Parallelism in the selected Poems...230

    Chapter Five: Conclusion

    5.0. Introduction248

    XII

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    5.1. Statistical Findings and Tabulated Results .... 248

    5.1.1. The Phonological Level.252

    5.1.2. The Grammatical Level..261

    5.1.3. The Semantic Level...271

    5.2. The Effect of Parallelism on Greenfield's Style...................................277

    5.3. Concluding Statement...281

    5.4. Recommendations for Further Studies283

    Bibliography.286

    List of Abbreviations

    Adj. Adjective

    Adv. Adverb

    Art .. Article

    Aux. Auxiliary

    Be. Verb To Be

    Comp Complement

    Conj Conjunction

    Det.. Determiner

    Inf Infinitive

    Iso P . Isocolon Parallelism

    Int PIntroverted Parallelism

    InV . Intransitive Verb

    M P Morphological Parallelism

    Neg . Negative

    N Noun

    No. .. Number

    O Object

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    0.0. Introduction

    The analysis of the language of literature has been the subject of study

    for many linguists. Many linguists have accepted the usefulness of

    linguistic theories and concepts in the study of literary texts. In this sense,

    it is possible to say that stylistics examines the use of linguistics in the

    analysis of literature. Stylistics is the branch of linguistics that studies the

    use of language in specific contexts and attempts to account for the

    regularities that mark the language use by individuals or groups. Stylistics

    or what has been called "literary linguistics" is concerned with the

    linguistic choices that distinguish genres (poetry, drama, noveletc) and

    with the ways in which individual writers exploited language (Hancock

    1986:446). This is both a linguistic and a literary exercise, since language

    is the medium of literature and style contributes to meaning. Thus,

    stylistics serves as a bridge between linguistic and literary disciplines.

    According to McMenamin and Dongdoo 2000, linguistic stylistics is the

    scientific analysis of individual style-markers as observed and identified in

    the idiolect of a single writer. In fact, the present study tackles the notion

    of parallelism as a unique style marker that is highly observed on different

    linguistic levels in the poetry of the African-American poet Eloise

    Greenfield. Parallelism is the most useful and flexible aspect of poetic

    language (Leech 1969). It refers to the use of words, phrases, clauses, or

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    sentences that are similar in structure, in sound or in meaning. It is useful

    in the sense that it allows a writer or speaker to hammer home an idea,

    image, or relationship, and to force the reader or listener to pay attention.

    It also imparts grace and power to literary writing. Moreover, it intensifies

    the readers excitement and suspense. More importantly, the vital role

    parallelism plays in poetry serves to convey the meaning of poetry more

    comprehensively. In other words, it is basic to meaning. It is where

    syntactic arrangement most deeply engages with reason. Thus, it is

    fundamental to the logical structure of language. This poetic feature of

    rhetorical beauty is most obvious in poetry and proverbs. The balance of

    verse with verse, is an essential characteristic feature in childrens poetry.

    The present study is a modest contribution that aims at analyzing

    selected childrens poems by Eloise Greenfield for exploring parallelism on

    different linguistic levels. It investigates the notion of parallelism which

    characterizes the style of Eloise Greenfield in her children's poetry. It

    adopts a stylistic analysis approach, which according to Davies & Elder: "a

    way of applying linguistic models to literary texts that pays attention to the

    formal features of the text" (Davies & Elder 2006: 332).

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    0.1. Organization of the Study

    The study comprises an introduction and five chapters as follows:

    The introduction presents the domain, the objectives of the study, data

    and methodology, and finally the relevant studies.

    Chapter one deals with the theoretical preliminaries and the main

    concepts tackled in the study such as style, stylistics, formalist stylistics,

    foregrounding theory, and parallelism.

    Chapter two is devoted to the phonological level and the phonological

    analysis of parallelism in Eloise Greenfield's poems. A comprehensive

    investigation of all patterns of sound parallelism was made. The chapter

    also examines the various effects which result from using patterns of sound

    parallelism in the poems and shows how these patterns reinforce the poet's

    message and enhance her art.

    Chapter three deals with the level of grammar and the grammatical

    analysis of parallelism in Eloise Greenfield's poems. A detailed analysis of

    morphological and syntactic parallel structures as well as an investigation

    of grammatical patterns of parallelism have taken place. The attention is

    also paid to the numerous effects of grammatical parallelism in the poems.

    Chapter four displays the semantic level and the analysis of

    lexical/semantic parallelism in Eloise Greenfield's poems. In this chapter,

    lexical parallels were discussed under the heading of semantics. Different

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    patterns of lexical/semantic parallelism were presented as well as the effect

    this type of parallelism achieves in the analyzed poems.

    Chapter five presents the statistical findings of this study. It also

    provides the stylistic features of Eloise Greenfield's poetry and some

    suggestions for further studies.

    0.2. Statement of the Problem

    The study will seek to answer the following research questions:

    1- What is the vital role and the effect of parallelism as a foregrounded

    stylistic device used in childrens poetry?

    2- What are the different types of parallelism that are obvious in the

    selected childrens poems?

    3- How does parallelism contribute to the meaning of the poem?

    4- How does parallelism characterize Eloise Greenfields style?

    0.3. Reasons for Choosing the Topic

    The topic under study is chosen particularly for the following reasons:

    1- The area of childrens literature especially childrens poetry is one of the

    most interesting areas to investigate.

    2- Choosing to explore the linguistic patterns of parallelism is due to the

    fact that parallelism is a strong foregrounded device that captures the

    reader's attention, serves to deliver the writer's message, and marks the

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    style of any piece of literary writing.

    3- Choosing Eloise Greenfield is due to the fact that she is one of the most

    prominent African-American figures in childrens literature. She is possibly

    the foremost African-American children's poet today. For over two decades,

    Eloise Greenfield has been a steady voice for African Americans and for

    children.

    4- After checking King Abdul Aziz City for Science and Technology and

    the UMI Dissertations Express online as well as other electronic libraries

    and universities, the researcher has found that no study has been done on

    the chosen topic. Therefore, the researcher is prompted to conduct this

    study.

    0.4. Objectives of the Study

    The main concern of the present study is to explore parallelism as a

    significant stylistic device used in the selected childrens poems. However,

    the main objectives behind conducting this study are:

    1- to provide a full account of parallelism as a dominant stylistic device

    used in literature in general and in childrens poetry in particular.

    2- to analyze the selected childrens poems and identify the different

    linguistic patterns of parallelism.

    3- to illustrate the effect of parallelism on each poem.

    4- to establish parallelism as one of the stylistic devices that characterizes

    Greenfield's style.

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    0.5. Significance of the Study

    It is a well-known fact that parallelism is one of the most noticeable and

    significant rhetorical devices. It is nowadays accepted not only as a

    traditional rhetorical device used in classical literature, but also as a

    common feature of style that characterizes literary writing. In spite of this

    fact, rhetorical devices in childrens poetry were given little attention in

    most academic studies. Thus, the present work aims at drawing more

    attention to the stylistic devices that characterize the style of Greenfield by

    investigating parallelism in Greenfield children's poems.

    Since stylistics is the interface between literature and linguistics, the

    present study will hopefully add to literary studies as well as linguistic

    studies. Moreover, the study will provide some insights into the nature of

    the language of childrens poetry.

    0.6. Limitations of the Study

    There are two worth mentioning limitations of language analysis of the

    poems under investigation: one author and one stylistic device. Thus, the

    analysis is limited to the selected children's poems by Greenfield, and the

    research is designed to get results that account for parallelism as a stylistic

    device.

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    0.7. Review of Related Literature

    Despite the vast literature on stylistic studies, few studies on parallelism

    were carried out. Most of these studies examined parallelism in the Bible.

    According to Berlin "Most biblical studies focused on parallelism. They

    started as studies of biblical poetry, but sooner became studies of

    parallelism" (Berlin 1992:18). However, the following studies are the most

    relevant ones to the chosen topic.

    J. F. Davis (1870) studied parallel structures in Chinese poetry. He

    emphasized the importance of parallelism in Chinese verse. To him,

    parallelism was the most interesting feature of all. Similarly, further

    studies of parallelism in Chinese literature have been conducted following

    the same path of Davis. These studies consider not only structural

    parallelism but also phonological and rhythmical parallelism.

    Riley Kernodle(1930) studied formal parallelism in Elizabethan drama.

    Different patterns of repetition and parallelism in three plays: Eastward

    Hoe, The Wild-Goose Chase, andLove's Labour's Lost were studied. The

    study concluded that formal parallels are fairly obvious in drama and that

    formal parallelism is of especial value to the playwright.

    Jessie Brome Sackler (1972) in a study entitled"ALinguisticTechnique

    forMarkingandAnalyzingSyntacticParallelism" used rhetorical texts to

    determine a way in which rhetorical syntactic parallelism can be analyzed.

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    This study made it possible to compare parallel constructions according to

    (1) the amount of parallelism as determined by the number of identical or

    similar tagmas in each sentence, (2) the "depth" of each construction as

    determined by the number of tagmas in the longest strand, (3) the "breadth"

    of each construction as determined by the number of strands in each

    construction, (4) the "effectiveness " of each construction as determined by

    the number of variable tagmas, (5) the "strength" of each construction as

    determined by the amount of lexical identity, and (6) the "rigor" of each

    construction as determined by the number of identical rather than similar

    tagmas in each.

    Danielle Roemer (1982) focused on kindergarten-aged children's use of

    parallel constructions in their peer storytelling which reflects children's

    interest in the organizational principle of theme and variation. The study

    showed that semantic and syntactic parallelism represent two of many ways

    in which some youngsters employ theme and variation in their storytelling.

    Also, the constructions give a sense of cohesiveness to narrative efforts and

    provide a mechanism for organizing descriptions of the fictive world. The

    study concluded that in using these parallel constructions the children hold

    constant the stated and then implied syntactic frame as well as the central

    idea of the meaning set, and variation develops as they consider the range

    of phenomena that can be appropriately described within that central idea.

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    A very related study is conducted by Ruth Lichtmann (1982). This study

    examined parallelism in the essays and poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins,

    setting his use of parallelism against the context of its interpretation in

    biblical criticism. Parallelism, a congruence of form and meaning,

    encompasses for Hopkins recurrences on three levels: parallelism of

    structure or sound, parallelism of expression, or metaphors and antitheses,

    and parallelism of thought, or contemplation of the poem by the reader.

    Parallelism is, then, the integrative principle or "inscape" of Hopkins'

    poems. The study showed that parallelisms of resemblance create a

    parmenidean unity of thought and expression, parallelisms of antithesis

    create a heraclitean entropy and opposition. Both unity and antithesis were

    fundamental to Hopkins' poetics, and the tension between them was only

    resolved in the contemplative response to the poem. Parallelisms, of

    resemblance and antithesis, evoke surprise, a response resembling Hopkins'

    own "instress," an awe and self-emptying in the contemplation of nature.

    Christine Massey et al (1983) conducted a study on Children'sSensitivity

    toStylisticFeaturesinLiterature.They examined children's sensitivity to

    two kinds of stylistic features in literature: "poetic" and "syntactic"

    features. Poetic features include parallelism, rhyme, meter and similes

    while syntactic features include active/passive voice, subject/predicate

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    order, and clause structure. The study concluded that children revealed a

    greater sensitivity to poetic than to syntactic features.

    Roye Williams (1991) studied parallelism in the Hodayot from Qumran.

    The study aimed to analyze parallelism in the Hodayot, thus grammatical

    parallelism, semantic parallelism, internal parallelism, and ellipsis were

    fully studied. The study concluded with statistical results that show the

    congruence between grammatical and semantic parallelism and between

    semantic and internal parallelism.

    Welland Crowell (1994) examined the Iliad as a whole from the

    standpoint of parallelism as a poetic means of creating significance. He

    investigated rhetorical strategies involving relationships of similarity and

    contrast. He argued that parallelism has a principal role in the coherent

    organization of the Iliad. The study concluded that parallel patterns of

    similarity and contrast contribute to the Iliad's structural design, narrative

    unity and poetic power.

    Luz Cortez (1999) examined the function of metaphor and parallelism as

    constructive strategies inJos Mara Arguedas'novelLos Ros Profundos.

    In particular, it is claimed that the protagonist's quest for his own origin and

    identity is used systematically as a primary semiotic component in both

    types of construction. The theoretical framework assumed is essentially

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    based on Roman Jakobson's analysis of metaphor and parallelism in their

    relationship to the poetic function of language. The work also drew upon

    Christian Metz' clarification of the sintagmatic and paradigmatic

    possibilities of metaphor. The study concluded that parallelism and

    metaphor function as contributors to the poetic quality of the novel and as

    formal devices in the general constructive strategy of the literary text.

    Saisunee Visonyanggoon (2000) studied syntactic parallelism in Thai.

    The researcher addressed parallel characteristics of the syntax of noun

    phrases and clauses in Thai. The study showed that Thai noun phrases and

    clauses are uniformly head-initial. Although the noun always appeared

    before a classifier, the crucial evidence supporting the head-initial analysis

    of noun phrases came from instances where nouns were modified by

    'referential' adjectives or demonstratives, which the head-final approach

    failed to account for. Therefore, the apparent head-final structure of the

    noun phrase resulted from NP movement across the classifier.In addition,

    the analyses of parallel clauses made use of the two tests, predicator and

    negation. The study helped confirm the syntactic status of the data under

    examination.

    Pilar Somacarrera (2000) focused on the systematical study of

    parallelism in Margaret Atwood's poetry. The use of this rhetorical scheme

    in his poetry was related to three main functions: definition, balance and

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    reasoning. Through the rhetorical analysis of these functions, the researcher

    argued that the poems were written with the persuasive intention of

    undermining certain destructive myths which have prevailed in the

    relationships between men and women.

    Maria Scherre (2001) examined the role of phrase-level parallelism on

    noun phrase number agreement in Puerto Rican Spanish and Brazilian

    Portuguese. The study demonstrated that Puerto Rican Spanish and

    Brazilian Portuguese exhibit more similarities than differences regarding

    linguistic parallelism(i.e., the tendency of similar forms to occur together

    within a stretch of discourse). A detailed analysis of Brazilian Portuguese

    data was presented, and the results were compared with those found by

    Poplack (1980a) for Puerto Rican Spanish. In conclusion, it was claimed

    that the phrase-level parallelism effect on noun phrase number agreement

    was embedded in a universal principle of linguistic use, parallel processing.

    More recently, parallelism has been the subject of considerable Arabic

    research: For example, Essam Shartah (2005) studied some stylistic

    features of Badwi AL-Jabal's poetry and among them are: deviation and

    parallelism. Patterns and functions of parallelism and deviation were

    indicated.

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    Adel AL-Zebadi (2007) investigated parallelism in a pre-Islamic verse at

    three linguistic levels, phonological, morphological, and syntactical. He

    adapted Jakobson's theory of parallelism in analyzing the verse. The study

    had shown that parallelism is one of the most important devices of poetic

    language and it played a crucial role in conveying the message of the poet.

    Adam Yosef (2007) detected parallelism and repetition in Dakhel AL-

    Khalifah's poetry. The study clarified the difference between parallelism

    and repetition and stated that both are prominent stylistic devices that

    characterized AL-khalifah's style.

    To the best of the researcher's knowledge, no study has been done on

    parallelism as a main stylistic device used in children's poetry. Thus, the

    present study is conducted as an attempt to account for parallelism in

    Greenfield's poetry on different linguistic levels.

    0.8. Data and Methodology

    The data of the proposed study consist of twenty-five poems selected

    from children's poetry by Eloise Greenfield which display parallelism.

    In order to achieve the objectives of the study, the language of the

    selected poems will be analyzed stylistically. The analysis will detect the

    different patterns of parallelism on different linguistic levels. Thus, all

    forms of parallelism in the selected poems are going to be discussed on the

    four microlinguistic levels, phonological, morphological, syntactic and

    semantic.