glosstext=<b>ALLITERATION:</b><br><br>When two or more words, used closely together in a poem (often in the same line) begin with the same letter or consonant sound:<br><br>		<b>B</b>ike / <b>B</b>us<br>		<b>Dr</b>ink / <b>Dr</b>ought<br>		<b>Cl</b>ose / <b>Cl</b>ick<br><br>In 'Mid-Term Break' Seamus Heaney uses alliteration with the repetition of the "c" sound three times in one line:<br><br>		<b>C</b>ounting bells knelling <b>cl</b>asses to a <b>c</b>lose.<br><br>Wilfred Owen uses alliteration in the following line of Dulce et Decorum est:<br><br>		<b>Kn</b>ock-<b>kn</b>eed<b> c</b>oughing like hags we <b>c</b>ursed through 		sludge...