Title: Elements of Poetry: Sound Devices
1Elements of Poetry Sound Devices
8th Grade English/Language Arts Poetry Unit
Sound Devices - Blume
2Take Cornell Notes.
Title is POETRY SOUND DEVICES
Your Name Todays Date Blume ELA8 Period
Write words to be defined and types of poetic
sound devices here.
Write definitions, explanations, and some
examples here.
(For these notes, you do not need to use a
summary space, as you see here.)
3Alliteration
The repetition of initial consonant sounds, in
two or more neighboring words or syllables.
The wild and wooly walrus waits and wonders when
we will walk by. Slowly, silently, now the
moon Walks the night in her silver shoon This
way, and that, she peers, and sees Silver fruit
upon silver trees -- from Silver by Walter de la
Mare How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a
woodchuck could chuck wood? (almost ALL tongue
twisters!)
4Alliteration examples
5- Hear the music of voices, the song of a bird,
the mighty strains of an orchestra, as if you
would be stricken deaf tomorrow. Touch each
object as if tomorrow your tactile sense would
fail. Smell the perfume of flowers - - from Three Days to See by Helen Keller
Alliteration examples
6Assonance
This one is usually NOT on the CST Test, but why
not know it?!
A repetition of vowel sounds within words or
syllables.
Fleet feet sweep by sleeping geese. Free and
easy. Make the grade. The stony walls enclosed
the holy space.
7Assonance examples
Poetry is old, ancient, goes back far. It is
among the oldest of living things. So old it is
that no man knows how and why the first poems
came. --Carl Sandburg, Early Moon
on a proud round cloud in white high night -
E. E. Cummings
I made my way to the lake.
8Assonance example
- The Eagle
- by Alfred Lord Tennyson
- He clasps the crag with crooked hands
- Close to the sun in lonely lands,
- Ring'd with the azure world, he stands.
- The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls
- He watches from his mountain walls,
- And like a thunderbolt he falls.
9Repetition
Think of all the songs you know where words and
lines are repeated often a lot !
- Words or phrases repeated in writings to give
emphasis, rhythm, and/or a sense of urgency. - Example from Edgar Allen Poes The Bells
- To the swinging and the ringing
- of the bells, bells, bells
- Of the bells, bells, bells, bells
- Bells, bells, bells
- To the rhyming and the chiming of
the bells!
10Rhythm and Meter
- Rhythm is the sound pattern created by stressed
and unstressed syllables. - The pattern can be regular or random.
- Meter is the regular patterns of stresses found
in many poems and songs.. - Rhythm is often combined with rhyme,
alliteration, and other poetic devices to add a
musical quality to the writing.
11Rhythm and Meter continued
- Example
- I think that I shall never see
- a poem lovely as a tree.
- The purple words/syllables are stressed,
and they have a regular pattern, so this poetic
line has meter.
12Rhyme
- The repetition of end sounds in words
- End rhymes appear at the end of two or more lines
of poetry. - Internal rhymes appear within a single line of
poetry.
Ring around the rosies, A pocket full of posies,
Abednego was meek and mild he softly spoke, he
sweetly smiled. He never called his playmates
names, and he was good in running games
13Rhyme Scheme
- The pattern of end rhymes (of lines) in a poem.
- Letters are used to identify a poems rhyme
scheme (a.k.a rhyme pattern). - The letter a is placed after the first line and
all lines that rhyme with the first line. - The letter b identifies the next line ending with
a new sound, and all lines that rhyme with it. - Letters continue to be assigned in sequence to
lines containing new ending sounds.
a.k.a also known as
This may seem confusing, but it isnt. Really!
14Rhyme Scheme continued
- Examples
- Twinkle, twinkle little star a
- How I wonder what you are. a
- Up above the earth so high, b
- Like a diamond in the sky. b
- Baa, baa, black sheep a
- Have you any wool? b
- Yes sir, yes sir, c
- Three bags full. b
15Rhyme Scheme continued
- What is the rhyme scheme of this stanza?
- Whose woods these are I think I know.
- His house is in the village though
- He will not see me stopping here
- To watch his woods fill up with snow.
From Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening by
Robert Frost
16Did you get it right? aaba
- Whose woods these are I think I know. a
- His house is in the village though a
- He will not see me stopping here b
- To watch his woods fill up with snow. a
17and...
18Onomatopoeia
Review...
Onomatopoeia is also considered a poetic sound
device.
Words that sound like their meaning --- the
sound they describe.
buzz hiss roar meow woof rumble howl snap
zip zap blip whack crack crash flutter
flap squeak whirr.. pow plop crunch splash
jingle rattle clickety-clack bam!