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The 6-5 Poetry Reading

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Page 1: The 6-5 Poetry Reading
Page 2: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

After three weeks of hard work, 6-5 has gathered some of their best creations, in

order to please you and your friends. Prepare to be inspired!

Veronica Borda on the violin

Page 3: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Cinquain

A cinquain takes its name from the Latin word, quinque, meaning five. The cinquain is like a haiku in that it is composed of a set number of syllables (22) and a per-line syllable count (2-4-6-8-2). A good cinquain will flow from beginning to end rather than sounding like five separate lines.

Jessica Ha, Anthony Rollins

Page 4: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Elegy PoemThe elegy is another poetic form that goes back to the ancient

Greeks. Like the modern ode and aubade, elegies have no specific form but they have a somber, sometimes mournful tone about

them because they are usually about the death of an important or much loved person. Walt Whitman wrote “When Lilacs Last in the

Dooryard Bloomed” because he was moved by the Death of Abraham Lincoln. Some elegies ,such as Thomas Gray’s Elegy (written in a country churchyard),” are more general laments

about the passing of time.

Shanayah Wyche, Avery Adeshigbin

Page 5: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Free Verse

Free Verse is poetry that does not require meter or a rhyme scheme.

Lydia Sassa, Michaela Maw, Joanne Luu, Margarita Ortiz, Alex Broggins, Nickolas Lozada, Liam Shanahan, Adriana Discher, Jonathan Comerford, Linus Schill, Denver McCollum, Jordan Smith, Riley Roache, Jessica Ha, Monica Jackson, Camille Taylor, Avery Adeshigbin, Toby Mast, Nina McPhaul, Tiffany Tran, Jessica Penn, Verionica Borda, Amira Berry, Isaac Schmidt

Page 6: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

HaikuThe haiku originated in Japan about 800 years ago. Each poem contains three unrhymed lines and usually includes 17 syllables, arranged in lines of 5, 7, and 5 syllables. A haiku usually describes a scene in nature and includes a seasonal reference.

Ethan Weiner, Rei Chiu, Nickolas Lozada, Jessica Penn, Isaac Schmidt, Amira Berry, Tiffany Tran

Page 7: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Limerick

The limerick is one of the most widely recognized poetic forms in the English language. It is a five-line poem that is made up of three lines (1, 2, and 5) with three accented

syllables. Read a good limerick out loud and you’ll hear its rhythm bouncing along.

Murphy Applin, Hannah Paul

Page 8: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Ode

An ode is a poem of celebration. Early odes, like those written in ancient Greece, were quite formal. Over time, however, many poets have come to realize that they can write an ode without the constraints of formal structure, so contemporary odes follow no rhyme scheme or stanza pattern, but they do celebrate!

Lydia Sassa

Page 9: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

IntermissionPlease enjoy the wonderful music by our own Ellen

Neilson, Hannah Paul, Joanne Luu, Anthony Rollins, and Rei Chiu

Page 10: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Adriana Discher

Page 11: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Toby Mast, Murphy ApplinToby Mast, Murphy Applin

Page 12: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

X

X marks the spotThey say X is the

Twenty fourth Letter of the

AlphabetSo they say or

X is a shapeTo me an X

is Only and just an X

Toby Mast

Page 13: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

FriendsFriends are like trees. They start as leaves. Sometimes

They are there, but in the fall, they fall. But sometimes, friends are like branches. You have to watch these too, because

Someone could steal that friend, That tree, by cutting the branch

Right off. But sometimes,These branches

Stay on, and Magically, they

becomeThe roots of

The tree W r w c g

I o e a r t o n o h t n w o s o

u t t

Murphy Applin

Page 14: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Riddle Poem

Isaac Schmidt and Kiyle Greene

Riddle poems have been around for hundreds of years in the literature of many cultures. The object of this poetic form is to indirectly describe a person, place,

thing or idea, and see if the reader can figure out the subject of the riddle. A good riddle poem should therefore be puzzling, but not impossible. That’s no fun.

A riddle poem usually rhymes, most often in the scheme abcb or aabb.

Veronica Borda, Toby Mast, Rei Chiu

Page 15: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Acrostic PoemsAcrostic poems are great

fun to write. They are basically descriptive

poems that can be as long as the author wants to make them. There’s a catch, however. When

read downward, the first letter of each line must form a word or phrase,

usually the subject of the poem.

Anthony Rollins, Jesse Turkson, Denver McCollum, Alexander Broggins, Liam Shanahan, Kiyle Greene, Jordan Smith, Linus Schill

Page 16: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Couplet

A couple is two things together, as in “They’re such a nice couple.” a couplet is two lines of poetry that go together, usually rhyming and usually expressing a complete thought. A couple can stand alone, as in

Ogden Nash’s many humorous examples; it can also act as a building block for other forms.

Toby Mast

Page 17: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Persona poem

A persona poem is writing from the point of view of the subject of the poem. For example, what might your pet parrot say if it could speak? Or the stuffed elephant that your sister always carries around? Some people call this poem a masked poem because the poet is in a sense, wearing a mask of the subject of the poem. Think about how you put on a mask at Halloween and become somebody or something different, and you get the idea of a persona poem.

Riley Roache, Nina McPhaul

Page 18: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Triolet

Although you might expect a triolet to have 3 lines, it actually has 8. The triolet gets its name from the fact that the first line occurs 3 times within the poem. In fact, the first two lines of the poem repeat as the last two lines of the poem and the opening line is also repeated as line 4. The rhyme scheme of a triolet looks like this: abaaabab.

Camille Taylor, Toby Mast, Jesse Turkson

Page 19: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Tercet

If you have a couplet and add a third line with the same end rhyme, you get a tercet. Some people call this poetic form a triplet.

Ethan Weiner, Hannah Paul

Page 20: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Rhyme

A poem or verse having a regular correspondence of sounds, especially at the ends of lines.

Monica Jackson, Shanayah Wyche

Page 21: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

QUATRAIN

The quatrain, the most common stanza inEnglish poetry, is made up of four lines.Although it can be unrhymed, poets usuallyfollow an a.b.a.b. or a.b.b.a. rhyme scheme. You’ll see this form in action in the sonnet andthe pantoum.

Jonathan Comerford

Page 22: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Pantoum Poem

A pantoum follows a complicated formula. It is written in quatrains and can be of any length. If the lines in the quatrains rhyme, the rhyme scheme is usually abab. So far so good, but here comes the tricky part. Lines 2 and 4 of each stanza are repeated as lines 1 and 3 are lines 2 and 4 of the previous stanza and lines 2 and 4 are lines 1 and 3 and 1 of the opening stanza. When all is said and done, every line in a pantoum is used twice, and the final line is the same as the first line.

A pantoum follows a complicated formula. It is written in quatrains and can be of any length. If the lines in the quatrains rhyme, the rhyme scheme is usually abab. So far so good, but here comes the tricky part. Lines 2 and 4 of each stanza are repeated as lines 1 and 3 are lines 2 and 4 of the previous stanza and lines 2 and 4 are lines 1 and 3 and 1 of the opening stanza. When all is said and done, every line in a pantoum is used twice, and the final line is the same as the first line.

Margarita Ortiz

Page 23: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

A five lined poem with a certain amount of syllables in each line: 2-3-2-3-3

Tanka

Michaela Maw

Page 24: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Poem of Address A poem of address is, roughly speaking, the

flip side of a persona poem. Rather than using his or her imagination to write what an

object is saying or thinking, in a poem of address the poet writes as though speaking to

a person or object. The poem is not about the object- although we will likely learn about

it in the poem – but to the object.

Ellen Neilson

Page 25: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Senryu

I like to call senryu “haiku with attitude.” a senryu follows the same pattern as a haiku -three lines of 5-7-5 syllables- but it is about a human nature rather than the natural world around us.

Joanne Luu Ellen Neilson

Page 26: The 6-5 Poetry Reading

Diamante

A diamante is similar to a cinquain, but it has seven lines. Diamante poems have the shape of a diamond. The first line is one noun. The second line is two adjectives. The third line has three

participles (-ing verbs). The fourth line has four nouns. Then the pattern repeats the opposite

direction. The fifth line has three participles (-ing verbs). The sixth line has two adjectives. The

seventh line has one noun.

Kiyle Greene

Page 27: The 6-5 Poetry Reading
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THANK YOU FOR COMING!

Avery Adeshigbin, Murphy Applin Jr., Amira Berry, Veronica Borda, Alexander Broggins, Reiyuan Chiu, Jonathan Comerford, Adriana Discher, Kiyle Greene,

Jessica Ha, Monica Jackson, Nickolas Lozada, Joanne Luu, Toby Mast, Michaela Maw, Denver McCollum, Nina McPhaul, Ellen Nielson, Margarita Ortiz, Hannah Paul, Jessica Penn, Riley Roache, Anthony Rollins, Lydia Sassa, Linus Schill, Isaac

Schmidt, Liam Shanahan, Jordan Smith, Camille Taylor, Tiffany Tran, Jesse Turkson, Ethan Weiner, Shanayah Wyche

Mrs. Nicole McGeary