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Lyric Poetry. An introduction with a romanticism twist. Song lyrics. On a separate sheet, write down your favorite song lyric (if it is explicit, make sure you use *** to indicate that). In about a sentence, explain what is so appealing to you about that song lyric. What is Lyric Poetry?.
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Lyric Poetry An introduction with a romanticism twist
Song lyrics • On a separate sheet, write down your favorite song lyric (if it is explicit, make sure you use *** to indicate that). In about a sentence, explain what is so appealing to you about that song lyric.
What is Lyric Poetry? • Lyric poetry expresses the personal thoughts and feelings of a single speaker. • Have a melodious, song like structure • Use imagery, sound devices, and figurative language “Poetry . . . is. . . a speaking picture . . . ” —Sir Philip Sidney
Figurative Language • Simile: comparing two apparently unlike things, using like or as • Metaphor: comparing two apparently unlike things without using like or as • Personification: giving human traits to something nonhuman • Oxymoron: juxtaposing two opposite or contradictory words that reveal an interesting truth
Sound Devices • Repetition: repeated use of sounds, words, phrases, or sentences. Poets use repetition for emphasis as well as to create a musical effect. There are three popular devices that rely on repetition: • Alliteration: repetition of initial consonant sounds • Consonance: repetition of final consonant sounds • Assonance: repetition of similar vowel sounds • Rhyme: repetition of sounds at the ends of words. • End rhyme is the most common type of rhyme, which occurs when rhyming words appear at the ends of lines. • Internal rhyme occurs when rhyming words appear within the same line. • Onomatopoeia: use of words that imitate sounds—for example, words like ring, boom, and growl. “The fair breeze blew, the white foal flew…” “a frightful fiend / Doth close behind…” “The western wave was all aflame.” “With heavy thump, a lifeless lump,…”
Lyrical BalladsPoetry is…. • “the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings.” Coleridge and Wordsworth
Ignoring the “love element” for a moment… • What makes this line romantic? • Focus on individual emotion • Comparison and link to nature My love for you is like a red, red, rose
The Natural Element • Comparisons are often made to nature… why? • “Nature”a creative and controlling force in the universe • An inner force or the sum of such forces in an individual.
Okay, so what makes it Lyrical? • Expresses the thoughts and emotions of one speaker… • “MY” • First person
Words and emotions create the tone of the poem • What is the tone?
What techniques are used? • Simile or Metaphor? • Imagery? • Alliteration? • Rhyme?
What words are used? • Love • Red • Rose
LOVE ROSE COMPARISON
Can you replace any of the words and achieve the same effect? • Yellow, white, pink? • Tulip, daffodil, lily? • Like, hate, tolerate?
So…how do words hold power? Explain.
A Red, Red Rose Robert Burns
Listen to the poem… Identify the techniques used to make the musical quality.
Now, Listen to the musical tune Burns’ poem as an old Scottish ballad.
Is it what you expected? Explain.
GUESS WHAT! Now you get to practice using words with power! Yahoooooooo! • Step 1: Fill in the following sentence stem choosing appropriate words to go in the blanks • My _________ for ___________ is like a(n) (emotion) (noun) _________ __________. (adjective) (noun from nature)
Write a 4 line poem and a 2-3 sentence interpretation of your poem using vocabulary related to romanticism Write an 8 line poem using at least 2 sound devices. STEP 2: You can either…