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Language

Rhythm

The rhythm of the opening lines, 鈥淗alf a league, half a league, / Half a league onward,鈥 creates a relentless beat which is continued throughout the poem.

This rhythm echoes the sound and pace of the horses鈥 hooves whilst reflecting the Light Brigade鈥檚 gallop into battle on horseback.

Tennyson uses a 鈥榝alling rhythm鈥. This means that the stress is on the first beat of each metrical unit, and then weakens for the rest of the length of the meter.

The use of falling rhythm is appropriate as The Charge of the Light Brigade focuses on the devastating fall of the army in this particular battle.

Repetition

Tennyson's heavy use of repetition also communicates the relentlessness of the charge, and the danger all around.

Anaphora

The poem also makes use of 鈥榓naphora鈥.

This means the same word is repeated at the beginning of several consecutive lines, 鈥淐annon to the right of them, / Cannon to the left of them, / Cannon in front of them".

Here the method creates a sense of unrelenting assault. At each line our eyes meet the word 鈥渃annon,鈥 just as the soldiers meet their flying shells at each turn.

Personification

These dangers are presented as being unavoidable - and death inevitable - with the use of , "Into the jaws of Death, / Into the mouth of Hell".

Militaristic language

The language of the poem is understandably militaristic 鈥 it bristles with guns, soldiers, cannon and sabres. However, the power of the poem comes from the careful use of imagery and sound effects.

Biblical language

The strong central image of the "valley of Death" refers to a poem in the Bible - Psalm 23 - about the 鈥渧alley of the shadow of death鈥. By using this biblical - which would have been very familiar to his audience - Tennyson elevates the event to great importance.

Alliteration

Tennyson's use of creates a effect. For example, in "Storm'd at with shot and shell" the use of reflects the viciousness of the attack.

Rhetorical questions

He also uses a question at the beginning of the final , "When can their glory fade?" After the five previous stanzas the answer to this question is clear - their glory should not fade because their sacrifice is symbolic of all those who lay down their lives for their country.

Action

There鈥檚 a great deal of action and energy in the poem, but no detail of the blood, guts, terror and screams of the battlefield.

This is illustrated in these lines - which offer a glorious rather than a graphic description - 鈥淔lash鈥檇 all their sabres bare, / Flash鈥檇 as they turn鈥檇 in air, / Sabring the gunners there鈥.

Adjectives

Tennyson doesn鈥檛 use overly extravagant adjectives to describe the soldiers. He writes that they rode 鈥渂oldly鈥 and he uses the word 鈥渨ell鈥 twice to describe how they fought, which is a very plain, restrained adjective.

Perhaps this is to increase the impact of his highest praise, which he saves for the end of the poem, when he calls them the 鈥淣oble six hundred鈥.