Title: Poetry%202:%20Nature%20
1Poetry 2 Nature Love Relations
- Imagery and Metaphor
- Rhyme and Rhythm
2Outline
- Responses, Review Your Questions
- Unit 2 General Questions
- Poems -- Wordsworth I Wandered Lonely as a
Cloud (p 677)19th C-- Whitman A Noiseless
Patient Spider (p. 1106) 19th C-- Mary Oliver
Wild Geese 20th C - --Robert Burns A Red, Red Rose (p 808) late
18th C - -- Aphra Behn On Her Loving Two Equally (p.
684) 17th C - For Pleasure
- Sting Shape of My Heart (Ref. Linda Pastan
Marks p 806) - Conclusion Next Week
- Reference Understanding Poetic Language
Figures of Speech, Rhyme and Rhythm
3Mini Play Contest Responses
- A great learning experience for us all about
- theatrical performance, both front and back
stage, - the stage and overcoming stage fright,
- team work and professionalism,
- communication (including solving problems and
expressing appreciation).
4Identity, Lyric and Tone
5Identity and Tone Your Interpretation
- 1) We Real Cool The We makes me put emphasis
on the certain group, these individual words form
to be collective, and I noticed that there are
seven We at the bottom of the lines. - 2) The Afro-Americans would die if they want
freedom. - 2) Im Nobody This poem consists of a few
words, but they convey an impressive theme how a
nobody can enjoy a private space of dignity. The
speaker conveys an idea that being famous is a
terrible thing. For her, nobody is incompatible
with somebody, so the speaker stops another
nobody to stay quiet for fear of their exile.
6Identity and Tone Your Interpretation
- 2) The author was lonely and sick of her life.
- 2) The poem talks about the pursuit of soul
inside our mind. - 2) Im Nobody In this poem, the author
elucidates a strong dislike of being somebody.
In terms of denotation?Apparently, it seems that
the author?When the speaker asks, Im nobody!
Who are you? Are younobodytoo? she is both
careful and happy about finding another person,
seemingly due due to her loneliness. But if we
look at it in terms of connotation, ? However,
from the way she opposes nobody and somebody, it
turns out that she is thrilled and happy because
she has discovered another individual who is as
smart as her and chooses to be a nobody. .
7Identity and Tone Your Interpretation
- 3) Stopping By Woods This poem gives us a sense
of loneliness and desolation. The picture in
front of us is crystal white and the sound is
deep quite as well. The narrator is on the way
back to his hometown. It seems like he has been
doing his own business (or other things) outside
for a long period. . At last, even the forest
and the surrounding atmosphere is attractive and
enchanted, the narrator had already made up his
mind to reach his missing lovely place, home.
8Identity and Tone Your Interpretation
- 3) Those Winter Sundays Second, here comes the
personification. The chronic angers of that
house literally means the house is angry, but
figuratively it means that it is like a person in
a bad shape, and thus is angry about itself.
Also, it can be explained as the angers of family
members, which suggests that the atmosphere of
the family is quite unhappy. Next, the explosive
consonant sounds (k,p b) in phrases like
blueblack cold, banked fired blaze, and the
cold splintering, breaking, create a sense of
harshness and difficulty, make the coldness much
more severe and vivid.
9Identity and Tone Your Interpretation
- 3) Those Winter Sundays In this poem , writer
put much emphasis on fathers old and sick image
in the beginning. ? - 4) the darkest evening of the year the
brightest day? - 5) we sing sin ? repent and improve themselves?
- 6)
10General Questions Love and Nature
- 1. How is nature treated in the 3 or 4 poems we
read? - 2. Here we have two views of love? How are they
each conveyed? And which do you agree with more?
11You be the poets
- 1) putting the poems together
- 2) reading the poem out loud
- 3) answering another groups questions
12 I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud
- William wordsworth (1770 1850)
13I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud
- How are the speaker and the daffodils set in
contrast, each with different similes and/or
metaphors? - Tense What is the function of the use of present
and past tenses? - What does inward eye refer to?
- Rhyme and Rhythm what do they convey?
14I wandered lonely as a cloud
- I wandered lonely as a cloudThat floats on high
o'er vales and hills,When all at once I saw a
crowd,A host, of golden daffodilsBeside the
lake, beneath the trees,Fluttering and dancing
in the breeze.Continuous as the stars that
shineAnd twinkle on the milky way,They
stretched in never-ending lineAlong the margin
of a bayTen thousand saw I at a glance,Tossing
their heads in sprightly dance.
15I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud
- The waves beside them danced but theyOut-did
the sparkling waves in gleeA poet could not but
be gay,In such a jocund companyI gazed---and
gazed---but little thoughtWhat wealth the show
to me had broughtFor oft, when on my couch I
lieIn vacant or in pensive mood,They flash upon
that inward eyeWhich is the bliss of
solitudeAnd then my heart with pleasure
fills,And dances with the daffodils.
16 A Noiseless Patient Spider
- Walt Whitman (1819 - 1892)
17A noiseless patient spider
- A noiseless patient spider,
- I mark'd where on a little promontory (??) it
stood isolated, - Mark'd how to explore the vacant vast(1)
surrounding, - It launch'd forth filament, filament, filament,
out of it self, - Ever unreeling them, ever tirelessly speeding
them. (2) -
- And you O my soul where you stand,
- Surrounded, detached, in measureless oceans of
space, - Ceaselessly musing, venturing, throwing, seeking
(4) the spheres to connect them, - Till the bridge you will need be form'd, till the
ductile (???) anchor hold, - Till the gossamer thread you fling catch
somewhere, O my soul. - (1. consonance, 2, assonance, 3. alliteration, 4.
internal rhyme)
18Spider web construction
1. the spider bridges the open space between the
two sticks
2. establishes the so-called proto-hub
video
- http//pages.unibas.ch/dib/nlu/staff/sz/webconstru
ct.html
19Spider web construction
3. the construction of the frame and the radii
4. The circling of the hub ? the construction of
the auxiliary (or temporary) spiral.? the
sticky spiral
- http//pages.unibas.ch/dib/nlu/staff/sz/webconstru
ct.html
20A Noiseless Patient Spider Discussion Questions
- Symbol What are the implications in comparing
the soul to a spider? - Compare Contrast How are the activities of the
spider similar to and different from those of the
soul? - Figurative language What are the effects of the
repetition of his apostrophizing (??) the soul
("O my soul")? - Sound effects?
- Form the pattern of free verse depends a lot on
repetition (with variation) of different poetic
elements. Why are there not as many repetitions
in the second stanza? From stanza one to two, we
see similar kind of variation of line length
(which gets longer and longer). What effects are
achieved here?
21Free Verse
- Unrhymed no regular length
- Rhythmical lines varying in length
- Patterns produced through repetition and parallel
grammatical structure. - Apostrophe-- figure of speech in which an absent
person, a personified inanimate being, or an
abstraction is addressed as though present - -- the poet talks to (and personifies) the one
addressed.
22Rhyme
- Rhyme is a sound device that usually entails the
repetition of the final vowel and consonant
sounds in two words. - internal rhyme Some poems have rhymes within the
lines. This is called. - Assonance is the repetition of vowels sounds,
either at the beginning of words or within words.
- Head rhyme Alliteration is related to assonance
in that alliteration also involves the repetition
of sounds, this time the repetition of consonants
at the beginning or middle of words.
- Walt Whitman "A Noiseless Patient Spider
- Poem animation http//www.youtube.com/watch?v0ML
YFC1nBWU - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vB7ui3PDC5tofeature
related
23A noiseless patient spider as a symbol
- Figurative language the soul, something active
(like spider working) and cherished (via
apostrophe). - Symbol a spider ? the soul
- difficult, quiet and laborious work in setting
up structures out in empty space. - The souls action musing, venturing, throwing,
seeking intellectual and various. - Sound effects? signifying their actions (slow,
soft, quiet, continuous and non-violent). - Form rhythm regular increasing line lengths
-- the extension of their threads and
connections. - (for your reference http//www.cc.nctu.edu.tw/sh
een/al/notes.html2 )
24Extension Questions A Noiseless Patient Spider
- 1. If you were going to compare yourself to an
animal, what animal would you choose? Why? - 2. Can you relate to the action of making
connections in the world or universe? Is it
difficult for you? - 3. The song "Sound of Silence" can be seen as
another search for inner soul--by talking to
darkness as an old friend. Please pay attention
to the contrasts in imagery between darkness and
light, silence and sound. The phrase "sound of
silence" is an oxymoron can you explain why?
25Walt Whitman
- A printer, teacher, journalist? poet ? hospital
worker, government clerk, later fired because of
his poetry. - Publishes Leaves of Grass in 1855, later revised
8 times. - A free thinker, sometimes without regular jobs.
(source) - portrait from an 1854 engraving by Samuel
Hollyer
26Walt Whitman Leaves of Grass
- -- challenged an American literary establishment
that he believed was too influenced by Old World
literary tradition. - He characterized his poetry as experimental,
termed his poetic mission "a war," and fought the
battle to establish a body of truly American
poetry--one that featured American language,
American life, an American vision, and musical
free verse--to his dying breath.
27"Song of Myself democracy and individualism
- I CELEBRATE myself, and sing myself,
- And what I assume, you shall assume,
- For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to
you. - (ll. 1-3, part 1)
-
- I depart as air, I shake my white locks at the
runaway sun, - I effuse (???)my flesh in eddies (??), and drift
it in lacy jags (??). - I bequeath myself to the dirt to grow from the
grass I - love,
- If you want me again look for me under your
boot-soles. - (ll. 7-10, part 52)
28"Wild Geese (1990)
- 1. Speaker and Tone
- Who is the "you" the speaker of this poem
addresses in the first and the third parts of the
poem? - 2. Goodness vs. Soft Body How are they opposed?
- 3. Despair vs. the Living World Describe how
nature is presented and what it suggests (with
two kinds of movement the sun and rain moving
across different places, and the wild geese
heading home). - 4. lonely you vs. the world What does the
speaker say the world can do for "you" (or us)?
Why is the world's call "harsh and clear" like
wild geese?
29 "Wild Geese (1990)
- You do not have to be good.
- You do not have to walk on your knees
- for a hundred miles through the desert,
repenting. - You only have to let the soft animal of your body
- love what it loves.
- Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you
mine.
30"Wild Geese (1990)
- Meanwhile the world goes on.
- Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the
rain - are moving across the landscapes,
- over the prairies and the deep trees,
- the mountains and the rivers.
- Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue
air, - are heading home again.
- Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
- the world offers itself to your imagination,
- calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and
exciting-- - over and over announcing your place
- in the family of things.
31"Wild Geese (1990)
- 1. Speaker and Tone
- You can be the reader or the wild geese (at the
end) any being. - 2. Theme the poem celebrates the naturalness of
our being (Soft Body), and communication among
natural beings despite their loneliness. - 3. Pattern long lines and the repetition of
meanwhile suggest the worlds connectedness and
continuity. Two basic moments regular and
natural home - 4. lonely you vs. the world The world is not
just beautiful we are lonely. But the worlds
various beings and happenings are there for us to
comprehend and imagine, so the worlds call is
"harsh and clear" like wild geese.
32"Wild Geese (1990)
- 1. Speaker and Tone
- Who is the "you" the speaker of this poem
addresses? - 2. Goodness vs. Soft Body How are they opposed?
- 3. Despair vs. the Living World Describe how
nature is presented and what it suggests - 4. lonely you vs. the world What does the
speaker say the world can do for "you" (or us)?
Why is the world's call "harsh and exciting" like
wild geese? - 5. Is this a free verse? Why?
- 6. How is Wild Geese different in its approach
to nature from that of I Wandered Lonely as a
Cloud?
33 "Wild Geese (1990)
- You do not have to be good.
- You do not have to walk on your knees
- for a hundred miles through the desert,
repenting. - You only have to let the soft animal of your body
- love what it loves.
- Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you
mine.
34"Wild Geese (1990)
- Meanwhile the world goes on.
- Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the
rain - are moving across the landscapes,
- over the prairies and the deep trees,
- the mountains and the rivers.
- Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue
air, - are heading home again.
- Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
- the world offers itself to your imagination,
- calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and
exciting-- - over and over announcing your place
- in the family of things.
35"Wild Geese (1990)
- 1. Speaker and Tone
- You can be the reader or the wild geese (at the
end) any being. - 2. Theme the poem celebrates the naturalness of
our being (Soft Body), and communication among
natural beings despite their loneliness. - 3. Pattern long lines and the repetition of
meanwhile suggest the worlds connectedness and
continuity. Two basic moments regular and
natural home - 4. lonely you vs. the world The world is not
always beautiful, and we are lonely. But the
worlds various beings and happenings are there
for us to comprehend and imagine, so the worlds
call is "harsh and exciting" like wild geese.
36An Anecdote!
- Swan falls in love with a swan-like pedal boat!
(2006 Muenster, Germany) http//news.bbc.co.uk/cbb
cnews/hi/newsid_6130000/newsid_6137400/6137406.stm
37A Red, Red Rose by Robert Burns (1759-1796)
- Song versions 1, 2
- Also the song writer of Auld Lang Syne (????)
38My love is like a red, red rose
Thats newly sprung in June
My love is like the melody
Thats sweetly played in tune.
As fair art thou, my bonnie lass,
So deep in love am I
And I will love thee still, my dear,
Till a the seas gang dry.
Till a the seas gang dry, my dear,
And the rocks melt wi the sun
And I will love thee still, my dear,
While the sands o life shall run.
And fare thee weel, my only love,
And fare thee weel a while !
And I will come again, my love,
Thou it were ten thousand mile.
39 - 1. Why does the speaker compare his love to red
rose sprung in June and sweet melody that play
in tune? - 2. Besides the two similes above, he also uses
some hyperbolic expressions (till the sea goes
dry, the sun melts the rock and while sand of
life runs). What could they possibly mean? - 3. At the end the speaker says that hell be back
though it were ten thousand mile. Is it real
or hyperbolic? -
40Behn, Aphra On Her Loving Two Equally
41 - 1. The poem starts with a very interesting
question when one loves two persons at the same
time, will his/her love be diminished in
strength? What does the speaker think? And you? - 2. How are rhymes and the poetic syntax used to
convey the speakers sense of struggle between
the two? (Pay attention to repetition, parallel
syntax and the rhymes.)
42ON HER LOVING TWO EQUALLY
- I.
- HOW strongly does my passion flow,
- Divided equally 'twixt two?
- Damon had ne'er subdued my heart,
- Had not Alexis took his part
- Nor could Alexis powerful prove,
- Without my Damon's aid, to gain my love.
- II. When my Alexis present is,
- Then I for Damon sigh and mourn
- But when Alexis I do miss,
- Damon gains nothing but my scorn.
- But if it chance they both are by,
- For both alike I languish, sigh, and die.
Double negative
Double negative inserted phrase
Alternating rhymes
Repetition of two-ness and die
43ON HER LOVING TWO EQUALLY
- III.
- Cure then, thou mighty winged god,
- This restless fever in my blood
- One golden-pointed dart take back
- But which, O Cupid, wilt thou take?
- If Damon's, all my hopes are crossed
- Or that of my Alexis, I am lost.
Cupid, love personified
Shot by his arrow falling in love
Request made and regretted
44Aphra Behn (1640-1689)
- The first female writer that earned her living
with the pen. - An introduction video
- A paper sample and its analysis (also on your
textbook p. 684)
45Linda Pastan Marks
- My husband gives me an Afor last night's
supper, an incomplete for my ironing, a B plus
in bed.My son says I am average, an average
mother, but ifI put my mind to itI could
improve.My daughter believes in Pass/Fail and
tells meI pass. Wait 'til they learnI'm
dropping out.
46Discussion Questions
- 1. The poem uses an extended metaphor for us to
see how the female speaker gets evaluated by her
family. What are the connotations when family
relations get compared to teacher-student
relations? What does each grade say about the
graders, or the graded? - 2. What do you think the ending mean?
- 3. Is your mother treated this way?
- 4. What do you think about receiving grades at
school? To what degree do they matter?
47Shape Of My HeartSting
- He deals the cards as a meditationAnd those he
plays never suspectHe doesn't play for the money
he winsHe doesn't play for respect - He deals the cards to find the answerThe sacred
geometry of chanceThe hidden law of a probable
outcomeThe numbers lead a dance
- I know that the spades are swords of a soldierI
know that the clubs are weapons of warI know
that diamonds mean money for this artBut that's
not the shape of my heart - He may play the jack of diamondsHe may lay the
queen of spadesHe may conceal a king in his
handWhile the memory of it fades
48Shape Of My HeartSting
- I know that the spades are swords of a soldierI
know that the clubs are weapons of warI know
that diamonds mean money for this artBut that's
not the shape of my heart - And if I told you that I loved youYou'd maybe
think there's something wrongI'm not a man of
too many facesThe mask I wear is one
- Those who speak know nothingAnd find out to
their costLike those who curse their luck in too
many placesAnd those who fear are lost - refrain
49Review Conclusion
Form Content
Free verse Long and short lines A Noiseless Patient Spider Wild Geese
Tetrameter Metaphor Simile I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud A Red, Red Rose
Image Symbol Images of Nature in Wild Geese Spider
A separate existence Wild geese
50Understanding Poetic Language
51Literary Techniques (1) Tone and Voice
Voice that of the speakers in lyrics, its
usually the first-person. The tone of a poem,
like the tone of our speech, implies the
speaker's attitude(s) towards the poem's
subject. The speaker's attitude can sometimes
be subtly expressed, and we need to carefully
study the poem's wording, rhythm and images to
understand the tone. The tones can range from
being ironic, neutral, ambiguous, to being
emotional and angry.
52Literary Techniques (2) Figures of Speech (????)
- Poets often deviate from the denotative meanings
of words to create fresher ideas and images. Such
deviations from the literal meanings are called
figures of speech or figurative language. - Example If you giddily whisper to your
classmate that the introduction to literature
class is so wonderful and exciting that the class
sessions seem to only last a minute, you are
using a figure of speech. - Example If you say that our textbook is your
best friend, you are using a figure of speech. - Kinds metaphors, similes, personification,
hyperbole, understatement, paradox, and pun.
Used by you in writing, speaking and joking.
53Literary Techniques (2-1) image (??)
Image means "a concrete picture" (Harper Handbook
235). In daily language image is usually a
composite of visual details, but literary images
can be those of sights, sounds, tastes, touch and
smells. When your composition teacher asks you
to give concrete, sensory details in your
narrative, you are asked to recall/re-create
images of your experience so that your readers
can experience and feel them, too. If you give
your images figurative meanings or other meanings
beyond the literal level, you are creating
figurative images (metaphors or similes) or
symbols. ".
54Literary Techniques (2-2) Imagery
(Please refer to my lecture on Araby) An
image is -- a word or sequence of words that
refers to any sensory experience (Kennedy and
Gioia 741). An image cluster (group) --
evokes a mental image, an atmosphere, or creates
symbolic meanings.
55Literary Techniques (2-2) Metaphor
A Metaphor is a type of speech that compares or
equates two or more things that have something in
common. A metaphor does NOT use like or
as. Example Life is a box of chocolate.
You'll never know what you're going to get. A
bowl of cherries. Eat it up! More life
metaphor /similes here! http//crinago1172.blogs
pot.com/2007/12/life-metaphors.html (reference)
56Literary Techniques (2-3) Simile, etc.
Simile -- e.g. Her voice was like nails on a
chalkboard. Personification Describing an
object or animal as though it had human
characteristics. -- e.g. Emilys coquettish
house in A Rose for Emily Apostrophe a direct
address to an imaginary object or absent person.
-- e.g. A Noiseless Patient Spider
(reference)
57Literary Techniques (2-4) Symbol
When an image is made to stand for two things, as
when a rose represents itself and also the color
in a young woman's cheeks, the image turns into a
METAPHOR, SIMILE, or other form of FIGURATIVE
LANGUAGE. e.g. "A Simile for her Smile" When
an image or an object has its own
meaning/existence, but then is also used
to suggest complex or multiple meanings. For
instance, when a rose represents itself, young
women generally, and also beauty and fagility, it
becomes a SYMBOL." (Harper Handbook 236)
(reference)
58Literary Techniques (3) Rhyme
- usually End Rhyme the repetition of the final
syllable (vowel and consonant sounds) in the last
words of poetic lines. - Different positions
- 2. internal rhyme rhymes within the lines.
- Sound Patterns
- Consonance repetition of consonants
- Assonance -- repetition of vowel sounds
- Alliteration -- repetition of the first
consonant (or syllables) - Different Kinds of Rhyme Exact rhyme vs. slant
(false) rhyme (room Storm), feminine rhyme
(of unstressed syllables)
59Literary Techniques (4) Rhythm scanning a poem
- Rhythm (??) refers to the stressed and unstressed
syllables in a poem. (Like ?? in Chinese poems.) - Meter (??)-- the pattern found among stressed
and unstressed syllables in a poem. E.g. iambic
(??) trochaic (??) - scansion --the analysis of stressed and
unstressed syllables in a poem. - Steps
- 1) Mark the syllables ??
- 2) Mark the feet. ?? (2 to 3 syllables e.g.
iambic ??) - 3) Mark the caesuras (noticeable pause in a line
of poetry)
60Next Two Weeks
- Analysis Comparison
- Creative Adaptation Translation, Singing,
Turning it into an Ad, Comparison, Writing a
Story, Relevance to our world
61See you next time!!!
62Works Cited
- Kennedy, X.J. and Dana Gioia, eds. Literature An
Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama. 7th
ed. New York Longman, 1999. - Literary Terms PowerPoint Presentation
lthttp//www.clintweb.net/ctw/littermsppt.pptgt