Title: Innocence Unit: Poetry
1Innocence UnitPoetry
- C. Edge
- English I
- ECHS
- 2007-2008
2Reading Skills and Strategies Poetry
- Look for punctuation in the poem telling you
where sentences begin and end. - Do not make a full stop at the end of a line if
there is no period, comma, colon, semicolon, or
dash there. - If a passage of a poem is difficult to
understand, look for the subject, verb, and
complement of each sentence.
3Reading Skills and Strategies Poetry
- Be alert for comparisonsfor figures of speech.
- Read the poem aloud.
- After you have read the poem, talk about it and
read it again. - Read the poem a third time.
4Speaker
- DEFINITIONthe voice that talks to the reader
- Every poem has one
- May NOT be the poet
- May be a fictional person, an animal, or even a
thing - Similar to the narrator in prose writing
5Lines of Poetry
- DEFINITIONa word or row of words that may or may
not form a complete sentence - Similar to sentences in prose writing.
- EXAMPLE (there are four lines in this poem)
- Roses are red.
- Violets are blue.
- You look like a monkey
- and you smell like one, too.
6Stanzas
- DEFINITIONa group of lines forming a unit of
poetry - Stanzas are separated by blank spaces.
- Similar to paragraphs in prose writing
- EXAMPLE (There is one stanza here)
- Roses are red.
- Violets are blue.
- You look like a monkey
- and you smell like one, too.
7Rhythm
- DEFINITIONthe pattern of sound created by the
arrangement of stressed and unstressed syllables
in a line. - Can be regular or irregular
- EXAMPLE
- Ro-ses are red. (4 beats)
- Vio-lets are blue. (4 beats)
- You look like a mon-key (6 beats)
- and you smell like one, too. (6 beats)
8Meter
- DEFINITIONa regular pattern of stressed and
unstressed syllables, which sets the overall
rhythm of certain poems - Stressed syllables are marked ( ) and
unstressed syllables are marked () - EXAMPLE
-
- Ro-ses are red.
-
- Vio-lets are blue.
-
- You look like a mon-key
-
- and you smell like one, too.
9Rhyme
- DEFINITIONthe repetition of the same stressed
vowel sound and any succeeding sounds in two or
more words - Internal rhymeoccurs within a line of poetry
- Example life is full of strife
- End rhymeoccurs at the ends of lines within the
same stanza - Example
- Roses are red.
- Violets are blue.
- You look like a monkey
- and you smell like one, too.
10Rhyme Scheme
- DEFINITIONthe pattern of the end rhymes
- May be designated by assigning a different letter
of the alphabet to each new rhyme. - EXAMPLE
- Ro-ses are red. A
- Vio-lets are blue. B
- You look like a mon-key C
- and you smell like one, too. B
11Imagery
- DEFINITIONdescriptive language that appeals to
the sensessight, sound, touch, taste, or smell. - Some images appeal to more than one sense.
- EXAMPLE
- The whistle of a boat
- Calls and cries unendingly
- (this image appeals to what sense?)
12Imagery
- Imagery contributes to a poems forcefulness.
- Imagery helps readers see things freshly like the
poet sees them. - Imagery is part of poets individual personal
style. - Imagery that is fresh and powerful helps to
create a strong emotional reaction.
13Simile and Metaphor
- Similea figure of speech using a word such as
like or as to directly compare seemingly unlike
things - Example He ran as fast as a cat.
- Metaphora figure of speech that compares or
equates seemingly unlike things, but does so
indirectly - Example His speed was almost feline.
14Metaphor
- In a direct metaphor, a comparison is made using
a verb such as is. - In an implied metaphor, a comparison is suggested
rather than stated directly.
15Personification
- DEFINITIONattributing human characteristics to
an animal, object, or idea - EXAMPLE
- The trees danced in the moonlight
16A Narrow Fellow In The Grass by Emily Dickinson.
A narrow fellow in the grass Occasionally
rides You may have met him, did you not, His
notice sudden is. The grass divides as with a
comb, A spotted shaft is seen And then it
closes at your feet And opens further on. He
likes a boggy acre, A floor too cool for corn.
Yet when a child, and barefoot, I more than
once, at morn, Have passed, I thought, a
whip-lash Unbraiding in the sun, When, stooping
to secure it, It wrinkled, and was gone.
Several of nature's people I know, and they
know me I feel for them a transport Of
cordiality But never met this fellow,
Attended or alone, Without a tighter breathing,
And zero at the bone.
17A Narrow Fellow In The Grass by Emily Dickinson.
A narrow fellow in the grass Occasionally
rides You may have met him, did you not, His
notice sudden is. The grass divides as with a
comb, A spotted shaft is seen And then it
closes at your feet And opens further on. He
likes a boggy acre, A floor too cool for corn.
Yet when a child, and barefoot, I more than
once, at morn, Have passed, I thought, a
whip-lash Unbraiding in the sun, When, stooping
to secure it, It wrinkled, and was gone.
Several of nature's people I know, and they
know me I feel for them a transport Of
cordiality But never met this fellow,
Attended or alone, Without a tighter breathing,
And zero at the bone.
Identify the subject, verb, and complement of l.4
and rearrange the syntax into standard word
order.
Subject notice Verb is Complement sudden
What do you think l. 4 means?
You dont notice he is there until you are right
on top of him he just seems to appear from
nowhere.
18A Narrow Fellow In The Grass by Emily Dickinson.
A narrow fellow in the grass Occasionally
rides You may have met him, did you not, His
notice sudden is. The grass divides as with a
comb, A spotted shaft is seen And then it
closes at your feet And opens further on. He
likes a boggy acre, A floor too cool for corn.
Yet when a child, and barefoot, I more than
once, at morn, Have passed, I thought, a
whip-lash Unbraiding in the sun, When, stooping
to secure it, It wrinkled, and was gone.
Several of nature's people I know, and they
know me I feel for them a transport Of
cordiality But never met this fellow,
Attended or alone, Without a tighter breathing,
And zero at the bone.
What two things are compared by the author?
He compares the path made in the grass to hair
parted by a comb.
How does this comparison help the reader imagine
the narrow fellows movement?
Although readers may be unfamiliar with a snakes
movement, they can easily visualize a comb
parting hair.
The speaker describes his reaction to a snake as
zero at the bone. What do you think he means?
19When I Heard the Learnd Astronomer
- By Walt Whitman
- Elements of Literature, p. 496
20Scene
- DEFINITIONThe location of the events of the
poem. - Poets use images to establish scene.
- A scene can be an external physical setting
- A hillside, a city, a pond, a room, etc.
- A scene can be internalized
- Inside the speakers mind
21Repetition
- DEFINITIONelements that are repeated
- Sounds can be repeated as well as words, phrases,
and images. - Examples of sound repetitions
- Alliteration
- Assonancethe repetition of vowel sounds within a
line of poetry
22Alliteration
- DEFINITIONthe repetition of consonant sounds at
the beginnings of words - EXAMPLE
- Peter Piper picked a peck
- of pickled peppers.
- How many pecks of pickled peppers
- did Peter Piper pick?
23Assonance
- DEFINITIONthe repetition of vowel sounds within
a line of poetry - EXAMPLE
- The rain in Spain
- falls mainly on the plain
24When I Heard the Learnd Astronomer By Walt
Whitman When I heard the learn'd
astronomerWhen the proofs, the figures, were
ranged in columns before meWhen I was shown the
charts and the diagrams, to add, divide, and
measure themWhen I, sitting, heard the
astronomer, where he lectured with much applause
in the lecture-room,How soon, unaccountable, I
became tired and sickTill rising and gliding
out, I wander'd off by myself,In the mystical
moist night-air, and from time to time,Look'd up
in perfect silence at the stars.
25Repetition
- What words or images are repeated in ll. 1-4?
- Repetition includes the use of When I to begin
each line, the phrase heard the astronomer, and
the words lectured and lecture. The image of
numbers and charts is also repeated. - How does the repetition help the reader
understand the speakers mood? - The repetition creates a monotonous rhythm,
echoing the boredom felt by the speaker readers
can almost hear the astronomer drone on and on.
26Imagery and Scene
- How does the image of the mystical moist night
air help the reader identify the external and
internal scenes in this part of the poem? - The words moist, night, and air appeal to the
senses of sight and touch and describe the
external physical setting, the word mystical
reveals the speakers mental state, which is the
internal scene. - How does this scene differ from the lecture room?
- The night sky has a feeling of expansion and
freedom while the lecture room feels closed and
contained this scene conveys mystery and wonder,
while the lecture room seems rigid and dull.
27Question 1, p. 498
- When you think of images in the world that give
you joy or that fill you with wonder, do you look
at ordinary things or at cosmic things, as
Whitman does? Or do you find wonder in
abstractions like math (or astronomy)? Talk over
your responses to each poets source of wonder
and joy.
28Question 3, p. 498
- What scenes do you see and share in Whitmans
poem? - External scenes include a lecture hall and the
outdoors under the stars. Internal scenes are
the speakers opposite states of mind inside, he
feels stifled outside, he feels at peace.
29Question 4, p. 498
- What do you think sick means in Whitmans
poemwhat was bothering the speaker as he
listened to the astronomer? At the end of the
poem, what part of the speaker has been restored
by the mystical starry night? - The speaker was sick at heart and unsettled
because the astronomer reduced the beauty of the
stars to charts and diagrams. Outside, the
speakers mood is restored.
30Question 5, p. 498
- Suppose you, the learnd astronomer, came upon
Whitmans poem a week after your lecture. How
would you respond to the poet? - The astronomer may feel annoyed by Whitmans
irreverence and lack of respect for learning.
Others may think that the astronomer would
disagree with Whitman and claim that astronomy
makes people appreciate the night sky all the
more.
31Fog
- By Carl Sandburg
- Elements of Literature, p. 502
32Simile and Metaphor
- Similea figure of speech using a word such as
like or as to directly compare seemingly unlike
things - Example He ran as fast as a cat.
- Metaphora figure of speech that compares or
equates seemingly unlike things, but does so
indirectly - Example His speed was almost feline.
33Metaphor
- In a direct metaphor, a comparison is made using
a verb such as is. - In an implied metaphor, a comparison is suggested
rather than stated directly.
34Fog By Carl Sandburg The fog comes on
little cat feet. It sits looking over harbor
and city on silent haunches and then moves on.
35Metaphor and Imagery
- Do you think the comparison of fog to a cat makes
sense? Why or why not? - Yes, both fog and cats move silently and seem
mysterious and elusive no, fog is more dangerous
than a cat. - What details extend the image of the cat in these
lines? - Like a cat, the fog sits and looks it rests on
silent haunches.
36Question 4, p. 507 Fog
- Why do you think Sandburg thought the fog was
like a cat? What other cat actions could fit into
Fog? - Fog creeps in silently life a cat cats also move
quickly, as can fog.
37Question 8, p. 507 Fog
- Read Sandburgs Fog again. Pretend you are
actually standing at the edge of a harbor and
watching the fog come in across the water. How do
you feel about everything around you
disappearing? How does the fog feel against your
skin? - The moment feels mysterious and spooky the fog
feels clammy.
38in Just
- By E.E. Cummings
- Elements of Literature, p. 504
39Imagery
- DEFINITIONdescriptive language that appeals to
the sensessight, sound, touch, taste, or smell. - Some images appeal to more than one sense.
- EXAMPLE
- The whistle of a boat
- Calls and cries unendingly
- (this image appeals to what sense?)
40Cliché
- DEFINITIONan expression so often used that its
freshness and clarity have worn off - A cliché is a word that has been played out.
41Allusion
- DEFINITIONa figure of speech that makes brief
reference to a historical or literary figure,
event, or object - Example from music
- Led Zeppelins Battle of Evermore has
references to Lord of the Rings.
42in Just- E. E. Cummingsin Just-spring
when the world is mud- luscious the littlelame
balloonmanwhistles far and wee and
eddieandbill comerunning from marbles
andpiracies and itsspringwhen the world is
puddle-wonderfulthe queerold balloonman
whistlesfar and wee and bettyandisbel
come dancing
from hop-scotch and jump-rope anditsspringand
the goat-footedballoonMan
whistles farandwee
43Question 5, p. 507
- E. E. Cummings is famous for his unusual
punctuation and arrangements of words. What are
the children doing in in Just- that matches the
leaps and jumps of the words? Why do you think
Cummings made single words out of the names Eddie
and Bill, Betty and Isbel?
44Question 6, p. 507
- Both Pan and Hephaestus, like most other Greek
gods, were pretty tricky customers. Do you think
Cummings depicts the balloon man as completely
harmless and kind? Which of the poems words and
images support your response?
45Creative WritingBONUS ASSIGNMENT
- Imitate the style of Cummingss poem in Just-,
and write a poem presenting fresh images that you
associate with a particular season. Avoid clichés
and other overused expressions. You might open
the way Cummings did in Just- . . . when the
world is . . . Play with words and punctuation
and typography just as Cummings did.
46Fifteen
- By William Stafford
- Elements of Literature, p. 570
47Denotation and Connotation
- DenotationThe basic meaning of a word.
- ConnotationThe emotional implications and
associations that words may carry, apart from
their denotative meanings.
48Fifteen William Stafford South of the Bridge
on SeventeenthI found back of the willows one
summerday a motorcycle with engine runningas it
lay on its side, ticking overslowly in the high
grass. I was fifteen.I admired all that pulsing
gleam, theshiny flanks, the demure
headlightsfringed where it lay I led it
gentlyto the road and stood with thatcompanion,
ready and friendly. I was fifteen.We could find
the end of a road, meetthe sky on out
Seventeenth. I thought abouthills, and patting
the handle got back aconfident opinion. On the
bridge we indulgeda forward feeling, a tremble.
I was fifteen.
Thinking, back farther in the grass I foundthe
owner, just coming to, where he had flippedover
the rail. He had blood on his hand, was paleI
helped him walk to his machine. He ran his
handover it, called me a good man, roared
away.I stood there, fifteen.
49Question 1, p. 574
- How do you think the writer of Fifteen felt
about the conflict that he made into a poem?
50Question 2, p. 574
- How does the boy in Fifteen feel about the
motorcycle? What lines convey that feeling?
What have you experienced that allows you to
understand his emotion?
51Question 3, p. 574
- What do you think the boy in Fifteen mean in
lines 11-12 when he says that he and the
motorcycle could meet the sky out on
Seventeenth? What else could meet the sky
mean?
52Question 4, p. 574
- The writer uses Fifteen as the title of the
poem, and the phrase I was fifteen as a
refrain, or chorus. What is the significance of
that number? Could it as well have been sixteen?
How about twelve or eighteen?
53Question 8, p. 574
- Suppose you are the person who finds the
motorcycle in Fifteen. The man who owns it
calls you a good man or woman. Given what you
were just thinking about doing, how does that
make you feel?