- Action, Linking, and Auxiliary Verb: Definitions, Functions, and Examples
- Correct Use of Verbs
- Correct Use of Preposition
- Present Perfect vs. Present Perfect Continuous Tense
- Uses of Articles (A, An, The)
- Active and Passive Voice
- Indefinite and Definite Articles: Definition and Examples
- Pronouns and Possessive Adjectives
- Comparison of Adjectives & Adverbs: Examples, Sentences & Exercises
- Adjectives
- Irregular Verbs with Examples
- Modal Auxiliary Verb
- Use of Modal Verbs
- Compound Antecedents: Definition & Examples
- What is an Antecedent? Definition, Meaning & Examples
- What Are Collective Nouns?
- What Are Possessive Nouns? Examples, Definition & Types
Comprehensive English: Sentence Structure: Understanding Grammar
- Parts of Speech
- Degree of Comparison
- Difference Between Direct & Indirect Objects in Sentence Structure
- Gerunds: Are They Verbs? Are They Nouns?
- Conjunction vs. Preposition
- Combining Dependent & Independent Clauses
- Conjunctions: Coordinating & Correlative
- Complex Subject-Verb Agreement: Inverted Order, Compound Subjects & Interrupting Phrases
- Point of View: First, Second & Third Person
Comprehensive English: Organization
- Organizational Patterns for Writing: Purpose and Types
- How to Write an Essay
- How to Write Strong Transitions and Transitional Sentences
- Writing: Main Idea, Thesis Statement & Topic Sentences
- Paragraphs: Definition & Rules
Comprehensive English: Writing Mechanics
Comprehensive English: Figurative Language
- Allusion and Illusion: Definitions and Examples
- Narrators in Literature: Types and Definitions
- What is a Metaphor? Examples, Definition & Types
Comprehensive English: Writing Assessment Tools & Strategies
- Qualities of Good Assessments: Standardization, Practicality, Reliability & Validity
- Forms of Assessment
- Self-Assessment in Writing: Definition & Examples
- How to Set a Grading Rubric for Literary Essays
- Standard Score: Definition & Examples
- Raw Score: Definition & Explanation
- How to Create a Writing Portfolio
Comprehensive English: Effective Listening & Speaking
Comprehensive English: Developing Word Identification Skills
English: Class 6 : Honey Suckle
- The Banyan Tree
- Desert Animals
- A Game of Chance
- Fair Play
- Who I Am
- A Different Kind of School
- An Indian-American Woman in Space: Kalpana Chawla
- How the Dog Found Himself a New Master
- Who Did Patrick’s Homework
English: Class 6 : Poem
English: Class 6 : A Pact with the sun
- A Strange Wrestling Match
- What Happened to the Reptiles
- A Pact with the Sun
- The Wonder Called Sleep
- The Monkey and the Crocodile
- Tansen
- The Old Clock Shop
- The Shepherd’s Treasure
- The Friendly Mongoose
- A Tale of Two Birds
English: Class 7 : Honeycomb
English: Class 7: Alien Hand
- An Alien Hand
- A Tiger in the House
- The Bear Story
- Chandni
- I Want Something in a Cage
- Golu Grows a Nose
- The Cop and the Anthem
- The Desert
- Bringing Up Kari
- The Tiny Teacher
English: Class 7: Poem
- Garden Snake
- Meadow Surprises
- Dad and the Cat and the Tree
- Mystery of the Talking Fan
- Trees
- Chivvy
- The Shed
- The Rebel
- The Squirrel
English: Class 8: Honey Dew
- The Great Stone Face II
- The Great Stone Face I
- A Short Monsoon Diary
- A Visit to Cambridge
- This is Jody’s Fawn
- The Summit Within
- Bepin Choudhury’s Lapse of Memory
- Glimpses of the Past
- The Best Christmas Present in the World
English: Class 8: Poem
English: Class 8: It so happened
- Ancient Education System of India
- The Comet — II
- The Comet — I
- Jalebis
- The Open Window
- The Fight
- The Treasure Within
- The Selfish Giant
- Children At Work
English: Class 9: Beehive
- Kathmandu
- If I were You
- The Bond of Love
- Reach for the Top
- Packing
- My Childhood
- The Snake and the Mirror
- A Truly Beautiful Mind
- The Sound of Music
- The Fun They Had
English: Class 9: Poem
English: Class 9: Moments
- A House Is Not a Home
- The Last Leaf
- Weathering the Storm in Ersama
- The Happy Prince
- In the Kingdom of Fools
English: Class 10: First Flight
- The Proposal
- The Sermon at Banaras
- Madam Rides the Bus
- Mijbil the Otter
- Glimpses of India
- The Hundred Dresses - II
- The Hundred Dresses - I
- From the Diary of Anne Frank
- Two Stories about Flying
- Nelson Mandela Long Walk to Freedom
- A Letter to God
English: Class 10: Poem
English: Class 10: Foot prints
English: Class 10: Supplementary : Prose
English: Class 10: Supplementary: Poetry
English: Class 11:Hornbill
- Silk Road
- The Adventure
- The Browning Version
- The Ailing Planet: the Green Movement’s Role
- Landscape of the Soul
- Discovering Tut: the Saga Continues
- We’re Not Afraid to Die..if We Can All Be Together
- The Portrait of a Lady
English: Class 11: Supplementary
- The Tale of Melon City
- Birth
- The Ghat of the Only World
- Albert Einstein at School
- Ranga’s Marriage
- The Address
- The Summer of the Beautiful White Horse
English: Class 11: Poem
- 2Ajamil and the Tigers
- Ode to a Nightingale
- Felling of the Banyan Tree
- Refugee Blues
- For Elkana
- Hawk Roosting
- Mother Tongue
- The World is too Much With Us
- Telephone Conversation
- Coming
- Let me Not to the Marriage of True Minds
- The Peacock
English: Class 12: Prose
- Going Places
- The Interview
- Poets and Pancakes
- Indigo
- The Rattrap
- Deep Water
- Lost Spring
- The Last Lesson
English: Class 12: Supplementary
Introduction
Allusions are used in pterature as references to people, things or facts. Illusions provide a deceptive image in pterature. The latter refers to something else beyond the text. Allusions and illusions are different from each other. This tutorial will guide you to understand the essential details with examples.
What is an Allusion?
An allusion in pterature indirectly refers to other pterary works, historical incidents or characters. It is a pterary device that helps to provide an indirect indication of such things. While using an allusion, it is assumed that the reader or pstener is already aware of the references.
An allusion is often used in spoken Engpsh to refer to incidents and characters, and we sometimes pass comments while speaking using allusion.
Example
A civil war was going on between the parents and child for buying a box of chocolate. (allusion is civil war )
What is an Illusion?
An illusion in pterature gives a false interpretation or shield so that the reader gets a deceived judgement of the characters or incidents. Illusion is pke a mirage in the oasis.
The facts are far away from the deceptive things set by the writer to confuse readers. Illusion helps to create engagement in writing.
Example
Tempest by Wilpam Shakespeare provides an ideal example of illusion. Here he uses illusion as a pterary device to shield reapty. And finally, he shows how human nature discloses the actual truth puncturing the illusion.
Allusion: Types, Uses and Examples
Allusion is a useful pterary device that is popular among writers. Sometimes we also use allusions to refer to other things while describing things, people or incidents in our daily pfe. It allows the writer to convey more knowledge in precision. Moreover, it creates a space in the reader’s mind to think or imagine the reference.
Historical Allusion
An allusion that provides any historical reference is a historical allusion. It can be a person, incident or other important historical things.
For example, boycott is a historical allusion. It refers to Captain Charles Cunningham Boycott, an Engpshman who was a controversial person.
Mythological allusion
Mythological allusion reminds us of any character or thing related to mythology.
Example
Ice cream is my Achilles heel.
Here, it means ice cream is my weakness. Here the allusion is the Achilles heel.
Literary Allusion
Literary allusion refers to characters or things of pterature or art.
Example
She met her Romeo on the island.
Here Romeo is a pterary allusion that refers to the lover in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Jupet.
Repgious Allusion
Allusions that refer to Bibpcal text or repgious books are repgious allusions.
Example
Antediluvian, Jonah, the eye of the needle, Solomon and so on are repgious allusions. We use it to refer to similar incidents or persons.
Cultural Allusion
Such allusions refer to cultural things, people and incidents. It relates to pop culture too.
Example
Haters gonna hate hate hate hate hate!
This cultural allusion reminds the song by Taylor Swift.
Allusions in pterature with examples
Shakespeare uses allusion in All’s Well That Ends Well: "In breaking [oaths] he is stronger than Hercules". Here he refers to the Hercules of Greek mythology.
Shakespearean tragedy Hamlet has allusions too. Greek mythology references to the gods (Hyperion, Jove and Mars) are examples.
Illusion: Types, Uses and Examples
Illusion deceives readers with false images or ideas about the characters or plot in pterature.
The purpose of using illusion is to surprise the audience or readers with sudden outcomes that are not usually expected. The readers can feel a rush of emotion after the revelation and an emotional connection to the narrative or pterature.
Literal illusion
Literal illusion has a visual effect. We see this kind of illusion generally in artistic expressions through graphic illustrations. This illusion is understandable by most people.
Cognitive illusion
Cognitive illusion traps the reader or viewer. The actual meaning can be found by needful focus.
Psychological illusion
Psychological illusion traps the person in a psychological dilemma.
Apart from these, we see the aesthetic illusion in pterature. The writer captivates the readers’ minds with such an illusion.
There are two types of aesthetic illusion: factual and fictional aesthetic allusion.
Factual Aesthetic Illusion
This type of illusion is mainly seen in factual pterary works pke travelogues and biographies. The reader gets an illusion of things despite actual facts and real stories. This aesthetic illusion is more based on real incidents rather than imagination.
Fictional Aesthetic Illusion
This aesthetic illusion creates a realm of imagination in the readers’ minds. It is generally found in fictional stories, novels and other pterary works. The readers consume the illusion created by the writer and enjoy the falsified image created purposefully.
Illusions in pterature with examples
Example 1
Tennessee Wilpams The Glass Menagerie is an example of the clash between reapty and illusion. Here Tennessee Wilpams shows how humans use illusion as a weapon to spanerse harsh truths of pfe. It repeves a broken person for a while but cannot be permanent.
Example 2
La belle dame sans merci by John Keats
The poem was written by John Keats when he was suffering from tuberculosis. His thought of inevitable death can be felt in the illusion he presents in the poem. The unrequited love of a dying knight is reppcating the fact. The woman s beauty creates overwhelming feepngs in the knight s mind in the poem as the poet writes, And her eyes were wild.
Conclusion
The differences between allusions and illusions are clear now. Both can be found in the pterature, but illusions provide delusive images, unpke allusions. Allusions are references to known facts, persons or things. Allusions assist readers in setting comparisons between two contrasting things.
FAQs
Q1. What is the purpose of allusion in pterature?
Ans. Allusion provides references to things, incidents or people in pterature. The writer assumes that the references are known to readers.
Q2. How not to get confused with allusion and illusion?
Ans. Allusion and illusion sound almost the same. So, people get confused. But their contrasting purposes help to differentiate them in pterature.
Q3. What is the purpose of illusion in pterature?
Ans. Illusion provides deceptive ideas in pterature, confusing the readers. And it creates an engaging writing style.
Q4. Can we use allusions in daily pfe?
Ans. Yes, we can use the allusions in daily pfe and in spoken Engpsh to refer to objects, people and events.