They're used most commonly by playwrights, and are less common nowadays than in Renaissance drama. For good examples - look at Thomas Middleton (who forms entire scenes with them), Ben Johnson or Marlowe. Or, rather more obviously, Shakespeare.
Here, for instance, is an example from Act 1 Scene 1 of 'The Changeling' by Thomas Middleton:
DEFLORES
[Aside] Will't never mend, this scorn,
One side nor other? Must I be enjoin'd
To follow still whilst she flies from me? Well,
Fates do your worst, I'll please myself with sight
Of her, at all opportunities,
If but to spite her anger.
"Though this be madness, yet there is method in't."
Beanis
An aside is when something is spoken within a book, play, or other literary product, often breaking the "fourth wall." This means that the aside is spoken directly to the audience in order to inform them of something a character thinks or plans.
http://www.enotes.com/literary-terms/homily this should help :]
dialogue
Dialogue
symbolism
An aside is when something is spoken within a book, play, or other literary product, often breaking the "fourth wall." This means that the aside is spoken directly to the audience in order to inform them of something a character thinks or plans.
In drama, the stage direction "aside" means lines are delivered to the audience, breaking the "fourth wall". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aside
to talk to the audience while the other actors can't hear it
The wrods pale fear are an example of the literary term personification.
http://www.enotes.com/literary-terms/homily this should help :]
Lord of the Rings
characterization
dialogue
A foil is a literary term.
dialogue
Autobiography is a subset of literary nonfiction. Literary nonfiction encompasses a broader category of nonfiction works that includes essays, biographies, and literary journalism, whereas autobiography specifically refers to an individual's account of their own life.
comedy