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Reading Poetry. A Very Basic Introduction. Poetry Defined. Poetry is Literature written in Verse Verse is language that is an arrangement of words in regularly measured, patterned, or rhythmic lines
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Reading Poetry A Very Basic Introduction
Poetry Defined • Poetry is Literature written in Verse • Verseis language that is an arrangement of words in regularly measured, patterned, or rhythmic lines • Poetry relies on exacting attention to the sounds, denotations, and connotations of individual words, phrases, lines, and stanzas • Poetry condenses complex ideas, experiences, and/or emotions into the smallest literary units possible
Tools of Poetry • Figurative Language: Any language that is not literal. The most important type of figurative language is the metaphor • Metaphor: Equating to unlike things to highlight some unique quality that they both share • Diction: Word choice. In poetry, we want to examine why the poet chose particular words or types of words he/she did. Looking for patterns in diction is often fruitful. We usually speak of a poem using a “type” of diction, like “formal diction”, “religious diction”, “sexual diction”, etc.
Tools of Poetry • Syntax: Sentence Structure. Poets use sentence length, shape, style, and order to help their readers feel or notice particular things. For instance, a writer may use a periodic sentence to build tension if they want you to feel tension. • Example of a Periodic Sentence: "In the almost incredibly brief time which it took the small but sturdy porter to roll a milk-can across the platform and bump it, with a clang, against other milk-cans similarly treated a moment before, Ashe fell in love."(P.G. Wodehouse, Something Fresh, 1915) • Note the way you feel tension as you read because you have to wait until the very end for the meaning of the sentence to become clear.
Tools of Poetry • Syntax (Continued) • Poets also use Syntax to create a particular rhythm / meter. This may mean inverting the syntax – reversing the normal order of words in a sentence. • Inverted Syntax: Normally (in English, at least), a sentence will have this basic structure: Subject Verb Object, as in The dog ate gerbils. • Subject=The dog Verb=ateObject=gerbils. • But, a sentence with inverted syntax would change this to read: • Gerbils the dog ate • It still makes syntactic and semantic sense, but seems odd to us, which gets our attention, which is often the point.
Tools of Poetry • Pattern: poets love to use patterns. Sometimes they do this for rhythm and consistency, sometimes for emphasis, and often so that they can BREAK the pattern at a key point so that you notice it more. • Patterns can be created through repetition, rhyme, line length, stanzas, types of diction, types of syntax, and pretty much anything else you can imagine • Rhyme: words that have matching end sounds. • End rhyme: words at the ends of lines that rhyme • Internal rhyme: words within a line that rhyme • Slant rhyme (near rhyme): words that almost rhyme • Rhyme Pattern: identifying which lines have end rhymes that match – usually marked with letters denoting each rhyme type