Top Banner
INTRODUCTION TO POETRY
35

INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Mar 26, 2015

Download

Documents

Madison Ortega
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

INTRODUCTION TO POETRY

Page 2: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

• Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing.

• Poetry is a sense of the beautiful; characterized by a love of beauty and expressing this through words.

• It is art. Like art it is very difficult to define because it is an expression of what the poet thinks and feels and may take any form the poet chooses for this expression.

Page 3: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Definition of Poetry• Poetry is not easily defined.

• Often it takes the form of verse, but not all poetry has this structure.

• Poetry is a creative use of words which, like all art, is intended to stir an emotion in the audience.

• Poetry generally has some structure that separates it from prose.

Page 4: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

• The basic unit of poetry is the line.

• It serves the same function as the sentence in prose, although most poetry maintains the use of grammar within the structure of the poem.

• Most poems have a structure in which each line contains a set amount of syllables; this is called meter.

• Lines are also often grouped into stanzas.

Poetry Basics

Page 5: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Stanza

• The stanza in poetry is equivalent or equal to the paragraph in prose.

• Often the lines in a stanza will have a specific rhyme scheme. Some of the more common stanzas are: • Couplet: a two line stanza

• Triplet: a three line stanza

• Quatrain: a four line stanza

• Cinquain: a five line stanza

Page 6: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

• Meter is the measured arrangement of words in poetry, the rhythmic pattern of a stanza, determined by the kind and number of lines.

• Meter is an organized way to arrange stressed/accented syllables and unstressed/unaccented syllables.

Whose woods / these are / I think /I know

Meter

Page 7: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Rhythm• When reading a poem out loud, you may notice a sort of

“sing-song” quality to it, just like in nursery rhymes. • This is accomplished by the use of rhythm. • Rhythm is broken into seven types.

•Iambic

•Anapestic

•Trochaic

•Dactylic

•Monosyllabic

•Spondaic

•Accentual

Page 8: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Rhythm• These identify patterns of stressed and unstressed

syllables in a line of poetry.

That means one syllable is pronounced stronger, and one syllable is softer.

iambic:

anapestic:

trochaic:

dactylic:

unstressed

Page 9: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Meter• The length of a line of poetry based on what rhythm is

used

• The length of a line of poetry is measured in metrical units called “FEET”.

• Each foot consists of one unit of rhythm.

• So, if the line is iambic or trochaic, a foot of poetry has 2 syllables.

• If the line is anapestic or dactylic, a foot of poetry has 3 syllables.

Page 10: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Meter Continued• Each set of syllables is one foot, and each line is

measured by how many feet are in it.

• The length of the line of poetry is then labeled according to how many feet are in it.

• Monometer - Pentameter

• Dimeter - Hexameter

• Trimeter - Octameter

• Tetrameter

• Rarely will there be more than 8 feet

Page 11: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

˘ ΄ ˘ ΄ ˘ ΄ ˘ ΄She Walks in Beauty

She walks in beauty, like the nightOf cloudless climes and starry skies;

And all that’s best of dark and brightMeet in her aspect and her eyes:

Thus mellowed to that tender lightWhich Heaven to gaudy day denies.One shade the more, one ray the less,Had half impaired the nameless grace

Which waves in every raven tress,Or softly lightens o’er her face;

Where thoughts serenely sweet express,How pure, how dear their dwelling-place.

And on that cheek, and o’er that brow,So soft, so calm, yet eloquent,

The smiles that win, the tints that glow,But tell of days in goodness spent,

A mind at peace with all below,A heart whose love is innocent!

Reading this poem out loud makes the

rhythm evident. Which syllables are more pronounced? Which are naturally

softer?

Count the syllables in each line to

determine the meter.

Page 12: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

• Rhyme is when the endings of the words sound the same.

Dust of Snow

by Robert Frost

The way a crowShook down on meThe dust of snowFrom a hemlock treeHas given my heartA change of moodAnd save some partOf a day I had rued.

Rhyme

Page 13: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

• Rhyme scheme is the pattern of rhyming words at the end of each line.

• Not all poetry has a rhyme scheme. They are not hard to identify, but you must look carefully at which words rhyme and which do not.

Dust of Snow

by Robert Frost

The way a crowShook down on meThe dust of snowFrom a hemlock treeHas given my heartA change of moodAnd save some partOf a day I had rued.

ABABCDCD

Poems of more than one stanza often repeat the same rhyme scheme in each stanza.

Page 14: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Approximate Rhyme• Also known as slant rhyme – created by substituting

assonance or consonance for true rhyme• Example: comb/coat; rule/room; walk/weak; hope/heap

Page 15: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

• Free verse is just what it says it is - poetry that is written without proper rules about form, rhyme, rhythm, and meter.

• In free verse the writer makes his/her own rules. The writer decides how the poem should look, feel, and sound.

• Blank verse is unrhymed Iambic Pentameter

• Shakespeare uses blank verse in his plays

Free Verse

Page 16: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Repetition is the repeating of a sound, word, or phrase for emphasis.

Inside

Inside the house (I get ready)

Inside the car (I go to school)

Inside the school(I wait for the bell to ring)

Page 17: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

• Figurative language is any language that goes beyond the literal meaning of words in order to furnish new effects or fresh insights into an idea or a subject.

• The most common figures of speech are simile, metaphor, and personification.

• Figurative language is used in poetry to compare two things that are usually not thought of as being alike.

• Figurative language is not necessarily imagery!

 

Figurative Language

Page 18: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

A simile is a figure of speech in which two essentially unlike things are compared, often in a phrase introduced by like or as.

The clouds looked like cotton candy.

Grandpa was as stubborn as a mule

Tom's head is as hard as a rock.

Simile

Page 19: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

A metaphor is a figure of speech in which an implied comparison is made between two unlike things that actually have something important in common.

 

Clouds are cotton candy.

Grandpa was a mule.

Tom is a rock.

They are fluffy.

They are stubborn.

They are hard.

Metaphor

Page 20: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

• A figure of speech, which gives the qualities of a person to an animal, an object, or an idea is called personification.

• It is a comparison, which the author uses to show something in an entirely new light, to communicate a certain feeling or attitude towards it and to control the way a reader perceives it.

• Example: A brave handsome tree fell with a creaking rending cry.

• The author is giving a tree the human quality of bravery and the ability to cry.

Personification

Page 21: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Winter Poem

By Nikki Giovanni

once a snowflake fell

on my brow and i loved

it so much and i kissed

it and it was happy and called its cousins

and brothers and a web

of snow engulfed me then

i reached to love them all

and i squeezed them and they became

a spring rain and i stood perfectly

still and was a flower

Page 22: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Apostrophe• The device of calling out to an imaginary, dead, or absent

person or to a place, thing or personified abstraction either to begin a poem, or to make a dramatic break in thought somewhere within the poem• Example: “Oh Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo?”

Page 23: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Sound Devices• Devices which add to the musical quality of the poem• There are many kinds, like Rhyme, and Rhythm• Assonance: repetition of vowel sounds within a line of

poetry• Example: And so, all the night-tide, I lie down by the side• Of my darling, my darling, my life and my bride.

• Consonance: the close repetition of identical consonant sounds before and after differing vowel sounds• Example: leave/ love; short shirt

Page 24: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

• The formation or use of words such as buzz or murmur that imitate the sounds associated with the objects or actions they refer to is called onomatopoeia.

• It is a word or a grouping of words that imitates the sound it is describing, such as animal noises like "oink" or "meow", or suggesting its source object (these are the more important ones), such as "boom", "click", "bunk", "clang", "buzz", or "bang".

Onomatopoeia

Page 25: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

SOUND OF NATURE

by Marie Josephine Smith

Ticking, tocking.Head is rocking.Tippy toeing. Quietly.Snap, crack.Crushing branch.Helter, skelter.Run for shelter.Pitter, patter.Rain starts to fall.Gathering momentum.Becomes a roar.Thunder booms.

____ ____

________

____ ____

____

Page 26: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

• Alliteration is the repetition of the same sounds or of the same kinds of sounds at the beginning of words.

• Modern alliteration is predominantly consonantal.

• To find an alliteration, you must look the repetitions of the same consonant sound through out a line.

Silvery snowflakes fall silently

Softly sheathing all with moonlight

Until sunrise slowly shows

Snow softening swiftly.

_ _ _

_ _

_ _ _

_ _ _

Page 27: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Imagery is an appeal to the senses. The poet describes something to help you to see, hear, touch, taste, or smell the topic of the poem.

Extended Image: an image that is developed over several lines of a poem or even throughout an entire poem

Fog

The fog comes on little cat feet.

It sits looking over harbor and city

on silent haunches and then moves on.

Carl Sandburg

SEE, HEAR

SEE

HEAR, SEE, FEEL

Page 28: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

An exaggerated statement used to heighten effect is a hyperbole. It is not used to mislead the reader, but to emphasize a point.

I’ve told you a million times not to leave the dirty glass on the table.

• Understatement: (meiosis) a type of verbal irony in which something is purposely represented as being far less important than it actually is• Example: The ocean is a pretty big mass of water.

• Pun: a form of wit, not necessarily funny, involving a play on words with two or more meanings but the same sounds• Example: grave/grave

Page 29: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

• An idiom is a phrase where the words together have a meaning that is different from the dictionary definitions of the individual words.

• This can make idioms hard for students to understand.

A day late and a dollar short.

 This idiom means it is too little, too late.

• Cliché: any expression that has been used so often it has lost its freshness and precision• Example: tried and true; the last straw, etc.

• Euphemism: an agreeable word or expression substituted for one that is potentially offensive• Example: rest room/ toilet; he is at rest/he is

dead

Page 30: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

• Haiku is one of the most important forms of traditional Japanese poetry.

• Haiku is, today, a 17-syllable verse form consisting of three metered lines of 5, 7, and 5 syllables.

• Each Haiku must contain a kigo, a season word, which indicate in which season the Haiku is set.

• For example, cherry blossoms indicate spring, snow indicate winter, and mosquitoes indicate summer, but the season word isn't always that obvious.

Haiku

Page 31: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Fog

On the mountain topThe fog fell down thick and fastIt was like pea soup.

Rain

Tip-tap goes the rain.As it hits the window paneI can hear the rain.

 

Hail

They fell in showers.Like diamonds upon the groundBig hailstones were found.

The theme of these three poems is weather in late autumn or early winter.

Haikus By Paul McCann

Page 32: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

The simplicity of the limerick quite possibly accounts for its extreme longevity. It consists of five lines with the rhyme scheme a a b b a. The first, second, and fifth lines are trimeter, a verse with three measures, while the third and fourth lines are dimeter, a verse with two measures. Often the third and fourth lines are printed as a single line with internal rhyme.

Old Man with a Beard

Edward Lear There was an Old Man with a beard, Who said, 'It is just as I feared!Two Owls and a Hen, Four Larks and a Wren, Have all built their nests in my beard!'

AABBA

Page 33: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

A narrative poem, often of folk origin and intended to be sung, consisting of simple stanzas and usually having a refrain.

The Ballade Of The Mistletoe Bough by Ellis Parker Butler

I am standing under the mistletoe,And I smile, but no answering smile repliesFor her haughty glance bids me plainly knowThat not for me is the thing I prize;Instead, from her coldly scornful eyes,Indifference looks on my barefaced guile;She knows, of course, what my act implies—But look at those lips! Do they hint a smile?

Page 34: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

I stand here, eager, and beam and glow,And she only looks a refined surpriseAs clear and crisp and as cold as snow,And as—Stop! I will never criticize!I know what her cold glance signifies;But I’ll stand just here as I am awhileTill a smile to my pleading look replies—But look at those lips! Do they hint a smile?

Just look at those lips, now! I claim they showA spirit unmeet under Christmas skies;I claim that such lips on such maidens oweA—something—the custom justifies;I claim that the mistletoe rule appliesTo her as well as the rank and file;We should meet these things in a cheerful guise—But look at those lips! Do they hint a smile?

Page 35: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY. Poetry is the most misunderstood form of writing. It is also arguably the purest form of writing. Poetry is a sense of the beautiful;

Some might consider the study of poetry old fashioned, yet even in our hurried lives we are surrounded by it: children's rhymes, verses from songs, trite commercial jingles, well written texts. Any time we recognize words as interesting for sound, meaning or construct, we note poetics.