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This article explores different types of poetry, such as lyric, narrative, and dramatic, as well as various sound devices and devices of language commonly used in poetry. Learn about stanzas, themes, rhyme, repetition, and more.
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Poetry Poetry
Types of Poetry Lyric poetry - expresses a speaker’s personal thoughts and feelings • Is rich in musical / sound devices • Includes many types such as ballads, hymns and sonnets Narrative poetry • Tells a story • May range from the unfolding of an isolated incident to the narrative of someone’s lifetime • Epics or situational poems
Types of poetry continued • Dramatic poetry • Poetry in which one or more characters exist • The speaker addresses a specific listener within the poem, or someone outside of the poem other than the reader
Classification by stanza length • Couplet = two lines • Triplet = three lines • Quatrain = four lines • Quintet = five lines • Sestet = six lines • Septet = seven lines • Octave = eight lines
Poetry terms • Theme – the central message or idea of the work • SOUND DEVICES: • Onomatopoeia – a word that sounds like its meaning • External rhyme – a similar sound between two words at the end of a line • Internal rhyme – a similar sound between words within a line • Repetition – repeating a word or phrase for emphasis or rhythm
Terms • Rhythm – ordered or free occurrences of sound (metered verse or free verse) • Refrain – repetition of a line or phrase at regular intervals, usually at the end of stanzas • Stanza – a division of poetry named for the number of lines it contains (like a paragraph in stories or essays, it breaks up the poem into different, yet related ideas)
Terms • Alliteration- repetition of consonant sounds • Assonance – repetition of vowel sounds • Caesura – a pause or sudden break in line created for effect • Parallelism – the repetition of phrases and sentences similar in meaning or structure
Devices of Language (or senses) • Speaker – the voice in a poem • Tone – the attitude a writer takes toward subject that is shown through language/word choice • Personification – giving human qualities to inanimate objects • Symbol- any object, person, place, or action that has meaning in itself and stands for something larger than itself • Denotation- the dictionary definition of a word (ex: black=a color resulting from the reflection of all colors of the spectrum
Devices of language • Connotation – the suggested or implied meaning of a word (black = dark, scary, morbid) • Hyperbole – over-exaggeration (“That took forever!”) • Irony (verbal) – saying one thing but meaning something else • Allusion – a reference to a famous person, historical event, or literary work • Simile- a comparison between two seemingly unlike things using “like” or “as”
Devices of language • Metaphor – a direct comparison between two seemingly unlike things • Extended metaphor – a direct comparison between two things through the whole poem • Imagery – language that appeals to the senses (sight, taste, touch, smell, sound); occurs in the reader’s mind