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Stanzas

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Stanzas Stanza etymology (word origins) From the Italian for: stopping place , or room . The above terms are derived from the Latin verb meaning: to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Stanzas


1
Stanzas
2
Stanza etymology (word origins)
  • From the Italian for
  • stopping place, or room.
  • The above terms are derived from the Latin verb
    meaning
  • to stand.

3
Stanza definitions
  • A group of lines that helps to
  • break up and organise how the poem appears on the
    page.
  • 2) A place where the reader stands and pauses.

4
Why pay attention to stanzas?
  • A poets choice of stanzaic form is usually
    appropriate to his or her subject matter or
    theme.
  • Considering how stanzas develop can help you
    follow the development of thoughts and ideas in a
    poem.
  • Once a stanzaic pattern is disrupted, this
    usually serves some expressive purpose it often
    creates an interesting effect that is worthy of
    analysis.

5
Quatrains (1)
  • Quatrain a four-line stanza.
  • The quatrain is one of the most common and
    versatile stanzaic forms in English poetry.
    Quatrains can be useful for narrative poems
    (poems that tell stories).

6
Quatrains (2)
  • Here is a quatrain from Coleridges The Rime of
    the Ancient Mariner. It narrates the action after
    the Mariner has blessed the water snakes
  • The self-same moment I could pray
  • And from my neck so free
  • The Albatross fell off, and sank
  • Like lead into the sea.

7
Quatrains (3)
  • Note the appropriateness of this stanzaic form
    the single rhyme per stanza (on lines 2 and 4)
    allows the poet flexibility. Yet the expectation
    of this rhyme (and each stanzas predictable
    rhythm) sets a pattern that aids the poems
    narrative drive and helps sustain the readers
    sense of expectation.

8
Taking it further varieties of quatrain
  • The quatrain quoted from The Rime of the Ancient
    Mariner is typical of the ballad form. Why not
    find out more about ballads and their features,
    including meter (rhythm) and line length?
  • Think of other poems that you know which are
    comprised of quatrains. To what extent do they
    have narrative features, or are the quatrains
    being used to serve other poetic aims?

9
Taking it further shifting stanzas
  • Consider any variations within the stanzaic form.
    If there is a shift from quatrains to another
    stanzaic form, what are the effects of such a
    shift?
  • For example, in a poem by Paul Muldoon entitled
    The Sightseers two quatrains allow the speaker
    to narrate a story of him and his family going on
    an outing together to see the first roundabout
    in mid-Ulster. After this revelation of their
    unusual destination, Muldoon shifts to using
    tercets (three-line stanzas).

10
Example shifting stanzaic form
  • The tercets allow the reader to register a shift
    in tone, subject matter and narrative perspective
    as the speaker recounts a story told by his uncle
    Pat. Despite the fluency of the narrative (which
    is enhanced by enjambment) the shorter stanza
    provides a stopping point and more white space
    to allow the reader to pause and consider these
    new and more disturbing events
  • Uncle Pat was telling us how the B-Specials
  • Had stopped him one night somewhere near
    Ballygawley
  • And smashed his bicycle

11
Example shifting stanzaic form
  • Muldoons final tercet allows the poem to climax
    with a potent and lingering image of violence and
    oppression
  • And made him sing the Sash and curse the Pope of
    Rome.
  • They held a pistol so had against his forehead
  • There was still the mark of an O when he got
    home.
  • Note also the effects of the full rhyme (in an
    otherwise unrhymed poem), which help to give the
    image further impact.

12
Examples shorter stanzas (1)
  • As we have seen from the previous example,
    tercets can be used to narrate, but often in such
    a way that allows images or events to stand out.
    In some cases, however, the primary focus is on
    the image.
  • Fan piece, for her Imperial Lord by Ezra Pound
    is comprised of a single tercet first it lingers
    on an image, then it suggests the significance of
    that image in a story
  • O fan of white silk,? clear as frost on
    the grass-blade,? You also are laid aside.

13
Examples shorter stanzas (2)
  • Here is another short poem by Pound, this time in
    a two-line stanza. Note that this time no
    narrative is suggested the image is simply left
    to speak for itself
  • In a Station of the Metro
  • The apparition of these faces in the crowd
  • Petals on a wet, black bough.

14
Conclusions
  • Considering the types of stanza used can help you
    to explore meaning and effects in poetry.
  • Noticing when a stanzaic pattern changes can
    often lead to interesting observations and
    analysis.
  • Explore other related features as you analyse
    stanzas. You might, for example, consider rhyme,
    rhythm, end-stopping and enjambment.
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