Slowed, shunted, changed

Slowed, shunted, changed

In Brief

Figure of speech. The first sentence of Aeolus shows deliberate linguistic patterning: "Before Nelson's pillar trams slowed, shunted, changed trolley, started..." But, as is often the case in rhetorical analysis, more than one term may be applicable. Homoioteleuton is a string of parallel words with similar endings. But this string also involves asyndeton.

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Homoioteleuton (HO-mee-o-teh-LOOT-on, from Greek homoios = same + teleute = ending) refers to multiple words having the "same ending." Gideon Burton (rhetoric.byu.edu) supplies an example of the device from Henry Peacham's The Garden of Eloquence: "He is esteemed eloquent which can invent wittily, remember perfectly, dispose orderly, figure diversly, pronounce aptly, confirme strongly, and conclude directly." Joyce's string of four past-tense verbs does not illustrate the principle quite so musically, since the final "ed" of two of them is silent in modern English. But it does perform the trope of deploying parallel words with similar endings.

Neither Gilbert nor Seidman says anything about this passage, but both see homoioteleuton in another string of words later in Aeolus: "mouth south: tomb womb." This claim seems faulty, since no distinct endings are involved. Even if one tortures the sense of the word to construe "outh" and "omb" as endings, they are not similar to one another. Instead of a chain of words with similar endings, Stephen is simply recalling two pairs of dissimilar rhymes.

John Hunt 2023
Source: wtex.stackexchange.com.
Source: homoioteleuton.blogspot.com.