Title: Poetry Terms and Techniques
1Poetry Terms and Techniques
- Ms. Aixa Rodriguez
- Belmont Preparatory High School
- ESL/ELA
2So.. you think you know
- All about poetry?
- Lets see!
- Yes, you must take notes!
- I am not kidding!
3Types of Poetry
- Narrative Poetry- a narrative poem is one that
tells a story. Types of narrative poetry include
ballads and epics. - Lyric Poetry- a highly musical verse that
expresses the emotions of the speaker. Common
types are sonnets, odes, free verse and elegies. - Dramatic poetry- a dramatic poem is a verse that
relies heavily on dramatic elements such as
monologue, or dialogue. Two types of dramatic
poetry are dramatic monologue and soliloquy.
4Whats a Ballad?
- Come on I know you can guess
5Ballad a narrative poem, sometimes sung, that
tells a dramatic story.
6What about.
- An acrostic poem?
- Whats that?
7Acrostic poem The first letters of the lines in
an spell a word, often the subject of the poem.
- Another very incredibly
- Intelligent and intuitive
- Xena type warrior princess teacher with
- An attitude.
Domo arigato gozaimashita
8Ok hotshots!
9Epic a long narrative poem centering on a
heroic figure who represents the fate of a nation.
- Beowulf is an Old English heroic epic poem of
anonymous authorship. In the poem, Beowulf, a
hero of the Geats, battles three antagonists
Grendel, Grendel's mother and, later in life
after becoming a king, an unnamed dragon.
10AhObi-wan has taught you well. The force is
with you young Skywalker, but you are not a Jedi
yet. - Darth Vader
11Concrete poem is written in a shape that adds
meaning to the poem.
12A little too easy- Darth Vader
13Free verse poetry with no set rhythm or rhyme.
14Ha! Impressive most impressive..- Darth Vader
- A challenge you say!
- Here you are! Define blank verse!
15- Blank verse unrhymed iambic pentameter.
16A bit of tutoring you need hmmm..- Yoda
- And if a person is to become one with the
force.what type of poem shall we write for them
hmmmm?
17Elegy or Elegiac poem a meditative poem
mourning the death of an individual.
18Whats a
- Dramatic Monologue?
- Soliloquy
19 Dramatic monologue a poem in which a character
addresses an audience.
- A fictional character, at a critical or dramatic
point in life, addresses a particular audience,
which his identifiable but silent. In the course
of the monologue, we learn a great deal, often
ironically, about the character who is speaking
and the circumstance that have led to the speech.
20Soliloquy
- A form of monologue found most often in drama. It
differs from a dramatic monologue in that the
speaker is alone, revealing thoughts and feelings
to or for oneself that are intentionally unheard
by other characters in Shakespeares plays for
example the principal characters reflections on
how to act or questions of conscience are
revealed in their soliloquies. To be or not to
be (Shakespeares Hamlet)
21See if you can get this clue
- The next poem rhymes with the last word in the
above sentence. It originated in an archipelago
famous for natural disasters, especially
tsunamis and earthquakes.
22Haiku a three-line poem usually about nature,
with this syllable pattern 5,7,5. This style
originated in Japan.
- The old bicycleleaning against the lamp
postWill it fall over?
23Alright poetic geniuses
- What is another poem similar to haiku but longer?
24 Tanka a five-line poem usually about emotions
with this syllable pattern 5,7,5,7,7.
- The tanka poem is very similar to haiku but tanka
poems have more syllables and it uses simile,
metaphor and personification. - There are five lines in a Tanka poem.
- Line one - 5 syllables Beautiful mountains
- Line two - 7 syllables Rivers with cold, cold
water. - Line three - 5 syllable White cold snow on
rocks. - Line four - 7 syllables Trees over the place
with frost. - Line five - 7 syllables White sparkly snow
everywhere. - Tanka poems are written about nature, seasons,
love, sadness and other strong emotions. This
form of poetry dates back almost 1200 years.
25Ok champs.. Lets see you get this one
- ??? a meditation or celebration of a specific
subject.
26Ode a meditation or celebration of a specific
subject.
- Excerpt from
- ODE ON A GRECIAN URN
- By John Keats
- What leaf-fringed legend haunts about thy shape
Of deities or mortals, or of both, In Tempe or
the dales of Arcady? What men or gods are these?
What maidens loath? What mad pursuit? What
struggle to escape? What pipes and timbrels?
What wild ecstasy? -
27Lets see if you get this one.
- ___________ a poem of fourteen lines in iambic
pentameter.
28Sonnet a poem of fourteen lines in iambic
pentameter.
The New ColossusNot like the brazen giant of
Greek fame, (a) With
conquering limbs astride from land to land (b)
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall
stand (b) A mighty woman with a
torch, whose flame (a) Is
the imprisoned lightning, and her name (a)
Mother of Exiles. From her
beacon-hand (b) Glows
world-wide welcome her mild eyes command (b)
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
(a) "Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!"
cries she (c) With silent lips. "Give me
your tired, your poor, (d)Your huddled masses
yearning to breathe free, (c)
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. (d)
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
(c) I lift my lamp beside the
golden door!" (d) Emma Lazarus, 1883
29Shakespeares Sonnet 116
- Let me not to the marriage of true minds
(a)Admit impediments. Love is not love (b)Which
alters when it alteration finds, (a)Or bends
with the remover to remove. (b)O no, it is an
ever fixed mark (c)That looks on tempests and is
never shaken (d)It is the star to every
wand'ring barque, (c)Whose worth's unknown
although his height be taken. (d)Love's not
time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks
(e)Within his bending sickle's compass come
(f)Love alters not with his brief hours and
weeks, (e)But bears it out even to the edge of
doom. (f)If this be error and upon me proved,
(g)I never writ, nor no man ever loved. (g)
30A quick quiz Do you know
- Stanza_________________
- Rhyme ________________
- Rhyme scheme ______________
31- Stanza grouping of lines within a poem.
- Rhyme repetition of the same sound.
- Rhyme scheme a regular pattern of end rhyme in a
poem.
32Ok, so lets now go over common
33Whats a couplet?
Je nais se pas!
34 Couplet two lines of poetry that usually rhyme.
- Avocado Girl
- By Ms. Aixa B. Rodriguez
- I am an ahuacatl of ancient days,
- Of both past and present ways.
- I am an aguacate of a familiar green,
- A nuyorbronxrican Queen.
- I am an avocado with rough Bronx skin,
- both Latina and American.
35Not bad.. Not bad..
- How about a tercet? Or triplet?
36 Triplet or tercet any three lines of poetry,
whether as a stanza or as a poem, rhymed or
unrhymed, metered or unmetered.
I am a yellow dog who wishes he was a
purple-spotted frog.
37You are getting it!
38Quatrain four lines of poetry that usually have
a rhyme scheme.
- A quatrain is a poem, or a stanza within a poem,
that consists always of four lines. It is the
most common of all stanza forms in European
poetry. The rhyming patterns include aabb, abab,
abba, abcb. - Example aabb (from William Blake, "The Tyger")
-
- Tyger! Tyger! burning bright In the forests
of the night, What immortal hand or eye Could
frame thy fearful symmetry?
39A cinquain? A quintain? Its driving me insane!
- You can do it!
- USE THE FORCE!
40Cinquain a five-line poem
- In summertime on Bredon
- The bells they sound so clear
- Round both the shires they ring them In
steeples far and near, - A happy noise to hear.
- -A.E. Houseman, Bredon Hill
41Does it ever end?
- Sestet six lines
- O, young Lochnivar is come out of the west,
- Through all the wide Border his steed was the
best - And save his good broadsword he weapons had none,
- He rode all unarmd, and he rode all alone.
- So faithful in love, and so dauntless in war.
- There never was knight like the young Lochnivar.
- - Sir Walter Scott, Lochnivar
42Nope.
- Heptastich seven lines
- The flower that smiles today
- Tomorrow dies
- All that we wish to stay
- Tempts and then flies
- What is this worlds delight?
- Lightning, that mocks the night,
- Brief even as bright.
- - Percy Bysshe Shelley, Mutability
43Last one! I promise!
- Octave eight lines
- Labor is blossoming or dancing where
- The body is not bruised to pleasure soul,
- Nor beauty born out of its own despair,
- Nor blear-eyed wisdom out of midnight oil.
- O chestnut tree, great-rooted blossomer,
- Are you the leaf, the blossom, or the bole?
- O body swayed to the music, O brightening glance,
- How can we know the dancer from the dance?
- - William Butler Yeats, Among School Children
44Quick quiz
- Sestet _________________________
- Heptastich ______________________
- Octave _________________________
45Ok.. now Rhythm and Rhyme!
- Techniques of Poetry Sound
46Rhyme
- End Rhyme- the use of rhyming words at the ends
of lines. - Internal rhyme use of rhyming words within lines
- Slant Rhyme- use of rhyming sounds that are
similar but not identical, as in rave and rove or
rot and rock. (consonance is a type of slant
rhyme).
47Ok, ok how about
- Alliteration and consonance?
48Alliteration repetition of initial consonant
sounds.
- Sometimes some students decide to stand instead
of sitting, to speak when someone is speaking and
simply act silly. -
49Consonance same consonant sound
- Avocado Girl
- By Ms. Aixa B. Rodriguez
- I am an ahuacatl of ancient days,
- Of both past and present ways.
- I am an aguacate of a familiar green,
- A nuyorbronxrican Queen.
- I am an avocado with rough Bronx skin,
- both Latina and American.
50Ok keep it clean
51Assonance repetition of vowel sounds among
words that begin or end with different consonants.
- "Do you like blue?".
- How now brown cow
- Hear the mellow wedding bells.
- Edgar Allan Poe, "The Bells"
52Meter and rhythm movement and pattern in a poem.
- Metrical verse follows a set rhythmical pattern.
Free verse or vers libre, does not. - The meter of a poem is its rhythmical pattern.
- English verse is made of rhythmical units called
feet. A foot is made up of weakly stressed (?)
and strongly stressed (/) syllables.
53Poetry has feet?
Type of Foot Pattern Example
Iamb, or iambic foot ? / afraid
Trochee, or trochaic foot / ? freedom
Anapest, or anapestic foot ? ?/ in a flash
Dactyl, or dactylic foot / ? ? feverish
Spondee, or spondaic foot / / baseball
Pyrrhee or pyrrhic foot ? ? unbelievable
54How many feet does your poem have?
Term Number of feet Example
monometer one foot And I Shall fly away
dimeter two feet After autumn Comes the winter
trimeter three feet In the midst of mourning
tetrameter four feet O saddle up my milk white steed
pentameter five feet That time of year thou mayst in me behold
hexameter six feet A perfect knight he was, that all could plainly see.
55Iambic pentameter ten syllables with 2nd, 4th
6th, 8th, 10th syllables accented.
- Shakespeare wrote in iambic pentameter.
56Techniques of Poetry Meaning
- Image- language that creates a concrete
representation of an object or an experience. - Objective correlative- group of images that
together create a given emotion in a reader or
listener. - Figure of speech or trope is an expression that
has more than a literal meaning. - Hyperbole- an exaggeration made for rhetorical
effect. - Metaphor- figure of speech in which one t thing
is spoken or written about as if it were another.
- Tenor of the metaphor is the writers actual
subject. - The vehicle of the metaphor is the other thing to
which the subject is compared or likened. - Personification and similes are types of metaphor.
57Techniques of Poetry Meaning contd
- Metonymy- the naming of an object associated with
a thing instead of the name of the thing itself.
Ex The White House for the President, or The
Crown for the King. - Simile- a comparison using like or as.
- Synaesthesia- a figure of speech that combines in
a single expression images related to two or more
different senses. Ex. Singing light. - Synecdoche- a figure of speech in which the name
of a part of something is used in place of the
name of the whole or vice versa. Ex. Hired hands
laborers
58Rhetorical techniques
- Rhetorical techniques are extraordinary but
literal use of language to achieve a particular
effect. - Antithesis- a rhetorical technique in which
words, phrases or ideas are strongly contrasted
often by repeating a grammatical structure. Ex
to err is human, to forgive divine. - Apostrophe- rhetorical technique in which an
object or person is directly addressed. - Catalog- a list of people or things
- Chiasmus- a rhetorical technique in which the
order of occurrence of words or phrases is
reversed. Ex. we can weather changes but we
cant change the weather. - Parallelism- a rhetorical technique in which a
writer emphasizes the equal value or weight of
two or more ideas by expressing them in the same
grammatical form, as in the phrase with hope,
with joy, and with love. - Repetition- writers conscious reuse of a sound, a
word, phrase sentence or other element. - Rhetorical question a question asked for effect
but not meant to be answered because the answer
is clear from the context.
59Structure and Language in Poetry
- Allegory- a narrative in prose or verse, in which
abstract ideas, principles human values or states
d of mind are personified. The purpose of the
allegory is to illustrate the significance of the
ideas by dramatizing them. Parable and fable are
kinds of allegory in which a moral I illustrated
in the form of a story.
60Allusion
- A reference to a historical event, to Biblical,
mythological or literary characters and incidents
with which the reader is assumed to be familiar.
Allusion may , with few words, enrich or extend
the meaning of a phrase or idea or image,
Allusion may also be used for ironic effect. In
his poem Out Rober frost expects the reader to
recall from Macbeths final soliloquy the line
Out out brief candle Such expressions as a
Herculean task or Achilles heel are also forms
of allusion.
61Ambiguity
- Denotes uncertainty of meaning. In literature and
especially poetry, we speak of intentional
ambiguity, the use of language and images to
suggest more than one meaning at the same time.
62Connotation
- The feelings attitudes images and associations of
a word or expression. Connotations are usually
said to be positive or negative
63Denotation
- That which a word actually names, identifies, or
points to Denotation is sometimes referred to
as the dictionary definition of a work.
64Figurative Language
- The intentional and imaginative use of words and
comparisons that are not literal but that create
original, vivid, and often unexpected images and
associations .
65Hyperbole
- An exaggerated expression also called
overstatement, for a particular effect, which may
be humorous, satirical, or intensely emotional.
Hyperbole is the expression of folktales and
legends. - Ex. I have mountains of work to do.
66Irony
- In general a tone or figure of speech in which
there is a discrepancy a striking difference or
contradiction between what is expressed and what
is meant or expected. Irony maybe used to achieve
a powerful effect indir4ectly. In satire, for
example it may be used to ridicule or criticize.
67Metaphor
- Form of analogy or comparison where the author
finds and expresses similarity between dissimilar
things.
68Onomatopoeia
- The use of words or phrases that sound like the
things to which they refer. Examples include the
words meow, clink, boom, and mumble.
69Oxymoron
- Related to paradox, oxymoron is a figure of
speech in which two contradictory or sharply
contrasting terms are paired fro emphasis or
ironic effect. Students favorite examples include
jumbo shrimp and army Intelligence. Poets
have written of the wise fool Joyful
sadness or and eloquent silence.
70Paradox
- An expression concept of situation whose literal
statement is contradictory , yet which makes a
truthful and meaningful observation. Less is
more
71Satire
- A form or style that uses elements of irony,
ridicule, exaggeration , understatement, sarcasm,
humor or absurdity to criticize human behavior or
a society.
72Simile
- An expression that is a direct comparison of two
things using words as like a s as if seems and
appears. - I wandered lonely as a cloud (William
Wordsworth
73Speaker
- The narrative voice in a poem. Also the character
who speaks in a dramatic monologue
74Symbol
- Anything that stands for or suggests something
else.
75Understatement
- Expression in which something is presented as
less important or significant than it really is.
Understatement is often used for humorous,
satiric or ironic effect. - He was not without imagination (Mark Twain)
76Unit Quiz
- Stanza grouping of lines within a poem.
- Rhyme repetition of the same sound.
- Rhyme scheme a regular pattern of end rhyme in a
poem. - Meter and rhythm movement and pattern in a poem
- Iambic pentameter ten syllables with 2nd, 4th
6th, 8th, 10th syllables accented. - Blank verse unrhymed iambic pentameter.
- Acrostic poem The first letters of the lines in
an spell a word, often the subject of the poem. - Free verse poetry with no set rhythm or rhyme.
- Alliteration repetition of initial consonant
sounds. - Consonance same consonant sound
77Quiz contd
- Assonance repetition of vowel sounds among words
that begin or end with different consonants. - Internal rhyme pattern where words within a line
rhyme with the one that ends it. - Couplet two lines of poetry that usually rhyme.
- Triplet or tercet any three lines of poetry,
whether as a stanza or as a poem, rhymed or
unrhymed, metered or unmetered. - Quatrain four lines of poetry that usually have
a rhyme scheme. - Cinquain a five-line poem, with this syllable
pattern 2, 4, 6, 8, 2. - Ballad a narrative poem, sometimes sung, that
tells a dramatic story. - Epic a long narrative poem centering on a
heroic figure who represents the fate of a
nation. - Concrete poem is written in a shape that adds
meaning to the poem. - Elegy a meditative poem mourning the death of an
individual. - Dramatic monologue a poem in which a character
addresses an audience. - Haiku a three-line poem usually about nature,
with this syllable pattern 5,7,5. This style
originated in Japan. - Tanka a five-line poem usually about emotions
with this syllable pattern 5,7,5,7,7. - Lyric poems that are brief and express a
powerful emotion Ode a meditation or celebration
of a specific subject.