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Poetry

Dive into the fascinating world of poetry and learn how to analyze its theme, form, and language. Discover the power of figurative language, rhythm, and rhyme in painting vivid pictures with words. Explore various poetic forms, from narrative to lyric, and unravel the secrets of the sonnet and ode. Enhance your understanding and appreciation of poetry with this comprehensive guide.

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Poetry

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  1. Poetry A poem is a composition in verse. It paints pictures by means of poetic devices such as figurative language, rhythm and rhyme.

  2. Analysis of Poetry • Theme/Main Idea • Form • Diction (Word Choice) • Tone (Attitude) • Imagery • Rhythm • Rhyme • Metre

  3. Poetic Forms • Narrative Poetry: Ballad, Epic, Allegory, Dramatic Monologue • Lyric: Sonnet (Petrarchan, Shakespearean, Modern), Ode, Elegy.

  4. Analysis of Poetry Theme/Idea Each poem conveys the messages or intentions of the poet and these may be explicit (0bvious) or implicit (implied). The poem may be a narrative, which tells a story, or a lyric, which describes the personal feelings of the poet.

  5. Analysis of Poetry Form A poem is written in a particular form. Poems are usually written in lines. These lines can be grouped into stanzas. Enjambment or run-on lines occur in poetry where there is no punctuation at the end of a line. The poet’s thoughts remain unbroken.

  6. Analysis of Poetry Diction The poet’s use of words creates atmosphere and sets the poem in its correct time and place. Word choice influences rhythm and mood. In a rhyming poem, appropriate word choice is crucial. Jargon and slang may be used for effect. The use of repetition is also an effective device.

  7. Analysis of Poetry Tone (Attitude) The tone of the poem reveals the poet’s subjective views and attitude to the reader and to the subject. Tone contributes to the mood or atmosphere of the poem. Best descriptive words for tone: Friendly Sharp Sarcastic Ironic Angry Humorous Condescending (Image the poet’s TONE OF VOICE – “hear” the poet reading his/her poem out loud…)

  8. Poetry is a combination of literal and figurative language. • Imagery conjures up word pictures – these affect us emotionally and intellectually. • Metaphors, similes, personifaction. • Alliteration, assonance, consonance, onomatopoeia. Analysis of Poetry Imagery

  9. Analysis of Poetry Rhythm Rhythm sets the pace and should match the meaning. Slow rhythm = sombre meaning. Quick pace = happy mood. When reading a poem aloud, FEEL the change of pace and how it affects the mood of the poem. Pace (tempo) and pause affect rhythm.

  10. Rhyme depends on sound, not sight. • Rhyme schemes differ. • Couplet: Two consecutive rhyming lines. • Quatrain: Four-lined stanza. Analysis of Poetry Rhyme Aabb = pair rhyme Abab = alternate/cross rhyme Aabb = enclosed rhyme Abca = free verse

  11. Analysis of Poetry Metre Metre is the number of stresses, beats or feet in a line of poetry. Shakespeare used the iambic (rising rhythm of two syllables) pentameter (five feet) to write his sonnets.

  12. Poetic Forms • The Ballad • The Epic • The Allegory • Dramatic Monologue • Elizabethan Sonnet • Petrarchan Sonnet • Modern Sonnet • The Ode • The Elegy Narrative poetry The lyric

  13. Poetic Forms: Narrative • A narrative form tells a story. • It usually has a beginning, middle, climax and conclusion. • Direct and narrated speech can be used. • Often composed to record historical, political and family events. • Passed down from generation to generation. • Example: “The Pied Piper of Hamelin”

  14. Poetic Forms: The Lyric • The Lyric is a poem with a musical or song-like quality. • The Lyric conveys the personal thoughts of the poet. • The Lyric was originally accompanied by the lyre. • This form was favoured by romantic poets like Wordsworth, Keats and Shelley.

  15. Narrative Poetry: The Ballad • Oldest form of narrative verse. • At one stage it was sung. • Subject matter: Love, death, war, bravery, adventure, action. • Rhythm has strong beat. • Today = songwriters.

  16. Narrative Poetry: The Epic • Long, narrative poem telling the story of an historical figure or event. • Has been referred to as a “novel in verse”.

  17. Narrative Poetry: The Allegory • The Allegory is a narrative poem that appears in the form of an extended metaphor. • It conveys a veiled moral meaning. • Example: “Faerie Queene” by Spencer.

  18. Narrative Poetry: Dramatic Monologue • Spoken in the first person (“I”). • The speaker addresses an invisible recipient. • From his words, we learn more about the speaker. • Story line = narrative. • Example: Robert Browning

  19. The Lyric: Elizabethan Sonnet • Shakespearean Sonnet • English Sonnet • 14 Lines • Three quatrains + rhyming couplet. • Iambic pentameter. • Couplet: Ties up the images and feelings and states the philosophy of the poet.

  20. The Lyric: Petrarchan Sonnet • Italian Sonnet • Octave (8 lines) + Sestet (6 lines). • Octave: The Problem • Sestet: The Solution • Break = Volta • Octave: abbaabba • Sestet: cdecde or cdcdc or cddcef.

  21. The Lyric: Modern Sonnet • These often combine aspects of the Shakespearean and Petrarchan forms. • They may create their own forms, but always retain the 14 lines.

  22. The Lyric: Sonnet Comparison

  23. The Lyric: The Ode • The Ode is an address or tribute in praise of something. • It describes the personal feelings of the poet. • Originally sung as accompaniment to a Greek Dance. • Later: Praise of inanimate object.

  24. The Lyric: The Elegy • A reflective poem or lament dealing with topics such as death or mourning. • Examples: “Elegy written in a Country Churchyard” by Gray and “Lycidas” by Milton.

  25. Poetry - Definitions A poet is, before anything else, a person who is passionately in love with language.(W.H. Auden) To have great poets, there must be great audiences.(Walt Whitman) Poetry is nearer to vital truth than history.(Plato)

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