poetry terminology forms how to read poetry. what is poetry? poetry is a type of literature in which...

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Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry

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Page 1: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Poetry

Terminology

Forms

How to Read Poetry

Page 2: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

What is poetry?

Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain effect.

Poets use a variety of sound devices, imagery, and figurative language to express emotions and ideas.

Page 3: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Terminology

Page 4: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Alliteration

The repetition of consonant sounds at the beginnings of words.

Example: “The angels, not half so happy in

Heaven, went envying her and me” Edgar Allan Poe, “Annabel Lee”

Page 5: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Assonance

The repetition of vowel sounds within non-rhyming words.

Example: “My grandmothers are full of memories /

Smelling of soap and onions and wet clay” Margaret Walker, “Lineage”

Page 6: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Ballad

A poem that tells a story (a narrative poem) and is meant to be sung or recited.

Page 7: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Blank Verse

Unrhymed poetry written in iambic pentameter. That is, each line of blank verse has five pairs of syllables.

Blank verse, the most versatile of poetic forms, imitates the natural rhythm of English speech.

Blank verse was commonly used by Shakespeare.

Page 8: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Couplet

A rhymed pair of lines.

Page 9: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Epic

A long, narrative poem about the adventures of a hero whose actions reflect the ideals and values of a nation or race.

Page 10: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Extended Metaphor

A figure of speech that compares two essentially unlike things at some length and in several ways.

It does not contain the word like or as.

Page 11: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Figurative Language

Language that communicates ideas beyond the ordinary, literal meanings of words.

Types of figurative language include personification, hyperbole, simile, and metaphor.

Page 12: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Form

The way a poem is laid out on the page. The length and placement of the lines

and the grouping of lines into stanzas.

Page 13: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Free Verse

Poetry that does not contain a regular pattern of rhyme and meter.

The lines of free verse poetry often flow more naturally than do rhymed, metrical lines.

Page 14: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Hyperbole

A figure of speech in which the truth is exaggerated for emphasis or for humorous effect.

Page 15: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Iambic Pentameter

A metrical line of five feet, or units, each of which is made up of two syllables, the first unstressed and the second stressed.

Iambic pentameter is the most common form of meter used in English poetry; it is the meter used in blank verse and the sonnet.

Page 16: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Imagery

Descriptive words or phrases that recreate sensory experiences for the reader.

Imagery usually appeals to one or more of the five senses: sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch.

Page 17: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Lyric Poem

A short poem in which a single speaker expresses personal thoughts and feelings.

Most poems other than dramatic monologues or narrative poems are lyrics.

Page 18: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Metaphor

A figure of speech that makes a comparison between two things that are basically unlike but that have something in common.

Metaphors do not use like or as. “All the world’s a stage, and all the men

and women merely players” William Shakespeare, “As You Like It”

Page 19: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Meter

The regular pattern of accented and unaccented syllables in a line of poetry. The accented, or stressed, syllables are

marked with ´, while the unaccented, or

unstressed, syllables are marked with ˘.

Page 20: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Narrative Poem

A poem that tells a story. They have characters, setting, plot, and

point of view, all of which combine to develop a theme (just like a narrative story).

Page 21: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Onomatopoeia

The use of words such as pow, buzz, and crunch whose sounds suggest their meanings.

Page 22: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Personification

A figure of speech in which human qualities are attributed to an object, animal, or idea.

Page 23: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Refrain

The repetition of one or more lines in each stanza of a poem.

Page 24: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Repetition

A technique in which a sound, word, phrase, or line is repeated for effect or emphasis.

Page 25: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Rhyme

The occurrence of a similar or identical sound and the end of two or more words.

There are different types of rhyme, such as internal rhyme, end rhyme, and slant rhyme. We’ll talk about these later.

Page 26: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Rhyme Scheme

The pattern of end rhyme in a poem. The pattern is charted by a single letter

of the alphabet, beginning with the letter A. Lines that rhyme the same are given the same letter.

Page 27: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Rhythm

The pattern or flow of sound created by the arrangement of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry.

By definition, rhythm is similar to meter. The terms are very closely related.

Page 28: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Simile

A figure of speech that makes a comparison between two things using the word like or as.

Page 29: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Sonnet

A lyric poem of 14 lines, commonly written in iambic pentameter.

The sonnet may be classified as Petrarchan or Shakespearean.

The Shakespearean sonnet consists of three quatrains (four-line units), and a final couplet (two-line unit) The typical rhyme scheme is ABAB CDCD EFEF GG.

Page 30: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Sound Devices

The use of words for their auditory effect to convey meaning and mood or to unify a work.

Common sound devices are alliteration, assonance, consonance, onomatopoeia, repetition and rhyme.

Page 31: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Stanza

A grouping of two or more lines in a pattern that is repeated throughout a poem.

A stanza is comparable to a paragraph in prose writing.

Each stanza may have the same number of lines, or the number of lines may vary.

Page 32: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Structure

In poetry, structure refers to the arrangement of words and lines to produce a desired effect.

A common structural unit in poetry is the stanza.

Page 33: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Symbol

A person, place, activity, or object that stands for something beyond itself.

Page 34: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Understatement

A technique of creating emphasis by saying less than is actually or literally true.

Understatement is the opposite of hyperbole, or exaggeration.

Page 35: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Poetic Forms

Page 36: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Common Poetic Forms

Sonnet (Italian and English) Petrarchan Shakespearean Spenserian

Ballad (English) Haiku (Japanese) Tanka (Japanese) Ode (Greek) Ruba’i

(Arabian/Persian)

Jintishi (a Chinese poetry form)

Sestina (English) Villanelle (English) Rondeau (French) Ghazal (Arabian,

Persian, Urdu and Bengal)

Sijo (Korean)

Page 37: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Common Poetic Forms

Most of these forms have faded from popularity, and are not commonly used by modern poets.

A majority of the poetry we will study is written in free-verse, which requires no rhyme scheme, meter, or specific form.

Most older forms, such as the ones mentioned previously, have highly-structured forms and rhyme schemes.

Page 38: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Did you know…

There are actually 51 recorded forms of poetry.

Fortunately, we’re not studying them all!

Page 39: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

How to Read Poetry

Page 40: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Understanding What Poetry Means Most people find poetry more difficult to

understand than prose writing. This is most likely because the authors

manipulate word order and language to create a desired effect, such as rhythm, meter, or rhyme.

Page 41: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Understanding What Poetry Means Do not treat poetry as poetry. Treat it as

prose. Do not interpret line-by-line. Instead, read

sentence-by-sentence, or read until the poet inserts some form of end punctuation (a semi-colon, period, etc.)

Interpret the poetry in chunks. Interpret the meaning of one stanza before moving on to the next. Interpret individual stanzas before trying to determine the meaning of an entire poem.

Page 42: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Understanding the Form of Poetry Observe the arrangement of words. Often,

this is done for a reason. Notice the length and arrangement of lines.

Are the lines short, simple phrases, or do they resemble sentences? What visual effect does this have on you?

Note whether the lines are grouped into stanzas. If they are, what idea, emotion, or information does each stanza convey?

Page 43: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Understanding and Analyzing Sound in Poetry Read the poem aloud, listening to how it

sounds. Notice any internal or end rhymes. Is there a

rhyme scheme? Analyze the rhythm. How does it add to the

effect of the poem? Look for other sound devices the poet uses,

such as alliteration, assonance, or onomatopoeia.

Page 44: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Understanding the Speaker

Look for clues that reveal something about the speaker, or narrator.

Connect the speaker’s feelings, ideas, and values to your own to form an impression of the speaker.

Page 45: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Understanding Imagery and Figurative Language Visualize comparisons that are made, either

by means of similes or metaphors. How do they contribute to the overall effect of the

poem?

Look for the use of personification. Notice if an animal or object is described as having human features, characteristics, or emotions. Often this can be spotted by words that are

capitalized that normally shouldn’t be.

Page 46: Poetry Terminology Forms How to Read Poetry. What is poetry? Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain

Understanding Imagery and Figurative Language Use a chart (like the one below) to keep track

of imagery. Determine which of the senses (sight, touch, smell, taste, or hearing) the poet is appealing to, as well as the effects the imagery has on you.

ImageSense It

Appeals ToIts Effect on

Me