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Poetry Terms

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Title: Poetry Terms


1
Poetry Terms
  • General Elements
  • Figurative Language
  • Sound Devices
  • Forms of Poetry
  • Types of Poetry

2
Elements Stanza
  • Formal division of lines in a poem
  • Considered a unit
  • Separated by spaces
  • Couplets two lines
  • Quatrains four lines

3
Speaker
  • Imaginary voice assumed by poet
  • Often not identified by name
  • May be person, animal, thing, or abstraction
  • E.g. Dickinson as dead person
  • Because I could not stop for DeathHe kindly
    stopped for me

4
Tone
  • Writers attitude to
  • audience and subject
  • E.g. formal or informal
  • serious, playful, pompous
  • bitter, ironic, personal
  • sympathetic, friendly
  • grieving, sarcastic, harsh

5
Allusion
  • Reference to well-known person, place, event,
    literary work, or art
  • Usually to the Bible or to mythology
  • E.g. The Magi . . . were wise men . . . who
    brought gifts to the Babe in the manger.

6
Connotation
  • Ideas or meanings associated with a word (in
    addition to dictionary definition)
  • E.g. caged bird sad, trapped
  • creature
  • previously owned vehicle used car
  • vacation spot lake
  • Compare fragrance, smell, stench

7
Denotation
  • Dictionary definition of a word
  • Independent of other associations
  • (connotations)
  • E.g. lake
  • Denotes inland body of water
  • Connotes vacation or fishing spot

8
Paradox
  • Statement that seems contradictory but may be
    true
  • Surprising, catches reader attention
  • E.g. Youth is wasted on the young.
  • The more things change, the more they stay
    the same.

9
Symbol
  • Object has own meaning but also represents
    abstract idea
  • Stands for something else
  • E.g.
  • Flag symbolizes country
  • Scarlet ibis symbolizes Doodle and other people
    who struggle

10
Figurative Language
  • Writing not meant to interpret literally
  • Compares dissimilar things
  • Creates vivid impressions
  • Metaphors, similes, personifications
  • E.g.
  • My black eyes are coals burningLike a low, full
    jungle moonThrough the darkness of being

11
Fig Lang Metaphor
  • Figure of speech
  • A comparison
  • One thing spoken of as if
  • it is something else
  • E.g. Poetry is a river.
  • The sky is a patchwork quilt.

12
Fig Lang Onomatopoeia
  • Words that imitate sounds
  • E.g. whirr, thud, sizzle, hiss, buzz, bang,
    pop
  • E.g. Poes Bells
  • Of the bells, bells, bells, bells
  • ringing, chiming, jangling,
  • rangling, clang, clash, roar

13
Fig Lang Simile
  • Figure of speech, comparison
  • Uses like or as to compare
  • two unlike ideas
  • E.g.
  • The morning sun is like a red rubber ball.
  • Does it dry up, like a raisin in the sun?

14
Fig Lang Imagery
  • Descriptive or figurative language
  • Creates word pictures (images)
  • Details of sight, sound, taste, touch, smell, or
    movement
  • E.g. ghostly marching on pavement
  • stones
  • wind-tanned skin
  • wise black pools

15
Fig Lang Personification
  • Figurative language
  • Nonhuman subject given human characteristics
  • E.g. The wind danced in the trees.
  • Daffodils tossing their heads in sprightly
    dance
  • Storm tosses her hair, throws back her head, and
    closes her eyes

16
Fig Lang Extended Metaphor
  • Writing about a subject as if it were something
    else
  • Comparison several lines long or entire poem
  • E.g. caged bird becomes person who is not
    free
  • broken-winged bird that cannot fly
  • becomes life without a dream

17
Fig Lang Sensory Words/Lang
  • Writing that appeals to the senses, e.g. images
  • Provides details related to senses
  • Example feeling the sun beating down on ones
    head

18
Sound Devices Assonance
  • Repetition of vowel sounds followed by different
    consonants in 2 or more stressed syllables
  • E.g. weak and weary
  • child of silence
  • so rollinga stone

19
Sound Devices Alliteration
  • Repetition of initial consonant sounds
  • Emphasizes words, imitates sounds, creates
    musical effects
  • E.g. I grew like a thin, stubborn weed,
    watering myself whatever way I could.
  • Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered
    weak and weary.
  • The fair breeze blew, the white foam
  • flew.

20
Sound Devices Rhyme
  • Repetition of sounds at ends of
  • words
  • End rhyme vs. internal rhyme
  • Exact rhyme vs. slant rhyme
  • E.g.
  • Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered,
    weak and weary.
  • Swans sing before they dietwere no bad thing
  • Should certain persons die before they sing.

21
Sound Devices Repetition
  • Use of any language element a sound, word,
    phrase, clause, or sentence more than once
  • Used for musical effects and for emphasis
  • E.g.
  • Alliteration, assonance, rhyme, rhythm repeat
    sounds
  • Refrain repeats line/s
  • You liked winningYou liked writingYou liked
    all the faces

22
Sound Devices Refrain
  • Regularly repeated line
  • or group of lines
  • In music a chorus
  • E.g. Quoth the raven, Nevermore.
  • Macavity, Macavity, theres no one like
    Macavity.

23
Sound Devices Rhythm
  • Pattern of beats or stresses
  • Some poems have a specific pattern or meter
  • E.g. There was a young lady named brightWhose
    speed was far faster than light
  • Prose and free verse use natural rhythms of
    everyday speech

24
Forms of Poetry Fixed Form
  • Stanzas have repeated or predictable patterns
  • Words in each stanza may rhyme or sound alike
  • Length and rhythm of stanzas are related
  • Number of syllables in line may be fixed

25
Forms of Poetry Free Form or Free Verse
  • Lacks structure or pattern
  • Words may not rhyme
  • Lines do not match in number of syllables,
    length, or rhythm

26
Forms of Poetry Sonnet
  • 14-line lyric poem
  • Formal patterns of rhyme, rhythm
  • and line structure
  • Two types
  • English, or Shakespearean
  • (3 quatrains couplet)
  • Italian, or Petrarchan
  • (octave sestet)

27
Forms of Poetry Haiku
  • 3-line verse form
  • 1st and 3rd lines 5 syllables (?)
  • 2nd line 7 syllables (?)
  • Single vivid emotion
  • Images from nature
  • E.g. Basho
  • furu-ike ya An old pondkawazu tobi-komu
    A frog jumps inMizu-no-oto The sound of
    water

28
Types of Poetry Lyric Poem
  • Brief poem
  • Musical verse uses rhythm, alliteration, and
    rhyme
  • Observations and feelings of
  • one speaker
  • Sung with lyre in ancient times

29
Types of Poetry Narrative Poem
  • Tells a story in verse
  • May be an epic or a ballad
  • E.g.
  • Casey at the Bat humorous narrative poem
  • Poes Raven serious narrative poem

30
Types of Poetry Ballad
  • Songlike poem that tells a story
  • Often adventure and romance
  • Most written in 4 to 6-line stanzas, regular
    rhythms and rhyme schemes, often a refrain

31
Types of Poetry Limerick
  • Humorous, rhyming, five-line poem
  • Specific meter and rhyme scheme
  • E.g. Edward Lear
  • There was an Old Person whose habits,Induced
    him to feed upon rabbitsWhen he'd eaten
    eighteen,He turned perfectly green,Upon which
    he relinquished those habits.

32
Types of Poetry Concrete Poem
  • Poem with shape that suggests subject
  • . . . t e a r
    s

33
Types of Poetry Dramatic Poem
  • Uses techniques of drama
  • Writer tells a story
  • Characters own thoughts/words
  • E.g. Poes Raven uses dramatic dialogue
  • Dramatic monologue 1 person speaks to silent
    listener
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