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LET’S LEARN ABOUT SOME POETRY!
“Poetry lifts the veil from the hidden
beauty of the world”-Percy Bysshe Shelley
Organizational Devices in Poetry
Verse—A line of poetry
Couplet—Two lines of rhymed poetry.
Stanza—An organizational pattern of verse.
Quatrain—A four line stanza or poem.
FORM
Form is the poem’s structure, or the way the words are arranged on the page.
Lines are group into stanzas, which function like paragraphs in prose. Each stanza plays a part in conveying the overall message of the poem.
Characteristics: follows fixed rules, such as a specified number of lines
Has a regular pattern of rhythm and/or rhythm
Forms: epic, ode, ballad, sonnet, haiku, limerick
Characteristics: does not follow established rules of form
Does not have a regular pattern of rhythm and may not rhyme at all
May use unconventional spelling, punctuation, and grammar
Forms: free verse, concrete poetry
Traditional Organic
Surgeons must be very careful
When they take the knife!
Underneath their fine incisions
Stirs the Culprit—Life! (Emily Dickinson)
1(aleaffalls)oneliness
(ee cummings “A Leaf Falls on Loneliness)
Traditional Organic
SONNET (TRADITIONAL)
Made up of 14 lines, commonly written in iambic pentameter. There are two types: Petrarchan and Shakespearean. A Shakespearean sonnet consists of three quatrains and a final couplet. The rhyme scheme is abab cdcd efef gg.
A Petrarchan, or Italian, sonnet rhyme scheme is abba abba cde cde. This consists of an octave (8 lines) and a sestet (6 lines). The octave usually introduces a problem and the sestet provides some sort of solution.
POETIC ELEMENTS
Like music, language has rhythm. The pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in each line creates the rhythm. Rhyme can occur at the end of the lines as end rhyme or within the lines as internal rhyme.
A regular pattern of rhythm is called a meter. A regular pattern of rhyme is called a rhyme scheme.
Repetition A sound, word, phrase, or
line that is repeated for emphasis and unity.
Alliterationrepetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words
Assonancerepetition of vowel sounds in words that don’t end with the same consonant
Consonancerepetition of consonant sounds within and at the end of words
“Back off from this poem. Back off from this
poem.”
“Which circle slowly like a silken swish”
“deep-eyed and deer in herds”
Whose nest is in a watered shoot
Sound device Example
METER
To identify the poem’s meter, you have to break each line into smaller units, called feet. A foot consists of one stressed syllable and one or two unstressed ones. Look at the type and the number of feet in each line and combine them to define the meter, for example, iambic pentameter.
Types of feet:Iamb (reSIST)- consists of an
unstressed followed by a stressed syllable
Trochee (ABsent)- consists of a stressed followed by an unstressed syllable
Spondee (GOAL LINE)- consists of two stressed syllables
Number of feet:trimeter: (3)
tetrameter: (4)pentameter: (5)
^ / ^ / ^ / ^ / ^ /
That time | of year | thou mayst | in me | be hold |
IMAGERY AND FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE
Figurative language communicates meanings beyond the literal meaning of words. Simile, metaphor, hyperbole, personification, and onomatopoeia are some examples.
Figurative language is more descriptive and evokes a stronger emotion.
Literal: He was angryFigurative: He burned with anger.
TERMS TO KNOW...Simile
a comparison b/w two unlike things, containing the words like or as
Metaphor
a comparison b/w two unlike things without like or as
Personification
a description of an object, an animal, or a place in human terms,
Hyperbole
an exaggeration for emphasis or humorous effect
My heart is like singing bird.
The assignment was a breeze.
This poem has taken in many victims
I’m so hungry that I could eat a horse.