Climax is any moment
of great intensity in a literary work, especially in drama. Also in rhetoric,
a figure of speech in which a sequence of terms is linked by chain-like
repetition through three or more clauses in ascending order of importance. A
well-known example is Benjamin Franklin's cautionary maxim, 'For want of a
nail, the shoe was lost; for want of a shoe the horse was lost; for want of a
horse the rider was lost.' This figure uses a repetitive structure similar to
that of anadiplosis. Adjective: climactic.