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Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.

Apr 01, 2015

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Page 1: Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.
Page 2: Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.

• Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas.

• Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express multiple layers of meaning.

• The word poetry is derived from the Greek poiesis, meaning a “making” or “creating.” It is a form of art in which language is used.

Page 3: Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.

Figurative Language

Language that is used imaginatively, rather than literally, to express ideas or feelings in new ways.

Page 4: Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.

Figures of SpeechSimiles: compares one thing to another and uses the words “like” or “as.”

Metaphors: an implied comparison made between two unlike things.

Personification: giving human traits (qualities, feelings, action, or characteristics) to non-human objects.

Page 5: Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.

Allusion: an allusion is the casual reference to a figure or event in history or literature that creates a mental image in the mind of the reader.

Symbolism: the use of one object (a symbol) to represent or suggest something else.

Page 6: Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.

Imagery: Descriptive language that creates vivid impressions. These impressions, or images, are developed through sensory language, which provides details related to sight, sound, taste, touch, smell, and movement.

Theme: the message of the poem

Tone: the manner in which a poet makes his statement; it reflects his attitude toward his subject. The reader must learn to "hear" their tones with his mind's ear.

Page 7: Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.

Rhythm the pattern created by stressed and unstressed syllables of words in sequence. A pattern of rhythm is called meter.

Rhyme is the repetition of identical sounds in the last syllables of words. A pattern of rhyme at the ends of lines is a rhyme scheme.

Alliteration or initial rhyme, is the repetition of the initial consonant sounds of words, as in light and lemon.

Page 8: Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.

Assonance or vowel rhyme, is the repetition of vowel sounds in nearby words, as in the words date and fade.

Consonance the repetition of consonants within nearby words in which the preceding vowels differ, as in the words milk and walk.

Page 9: Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.

Narrative poetry tells a story with a plot, characters, and a setting.

Carpe diem is a Latin expression that means "seize the day." Carpe diem poems have the theme of living for today. •Epic is a long narrative poem about the feats of gods or heroes.

•Ballad is a songlike narrative with stanzas and a refrain.

Page 10: Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.

Dramatic poetry tells a story using a character’s own thoughts or spoken statement.

Imagery Poems draw the reader into poetic experiences by touching on the images and senses which the reader already knows.

Lyric poems express the feelings of a single speaker.

*Lyrics are the most common type of poem in modern literature.

Page 11: Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.

Poems can also be categorized by structure, or form. Poetic structures are defined by patterns of line and stanza length, rhythm, and rhyme. Some examples are:

Haiku is a verse form with three unrhymed lines of five, seven, and five syllables.

Free verse poems have neither a set pattern of rhythm or rhyme.

Acrostic Poem tells about the word. It uses the letters of the word for the first letter of each line.

Page 12: Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.

Analyzing Poetry

Analysis means literally picking a poem apart - looking at elements such as imagery,symbolism, allusion, metaphor, poetic language, rhyme scheme, and so on - in order to see how they all work together to produce the poem's meaning.

Annotating is a great way to begin analyzing a poem.

Page 13: Poetry is literature in verse form, a controlled arrangement of lines and stanzas. Poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to express.

To annotate, put the poem under THE SCOPE and take a really good look at it.

T: Theme – What is the message of the poem?

H: How does the author arrange the words? What type of syntax and sentence structure is being used in the poem?

E: Emotions – Tone? Mood?

S: Subject Matter – What is the poem about? Look at the title.

C: Characters – Who are the characters, if any, in the poem?

O: Occasion – What is the setting? What is the time, place, and/or event going on in the poem?

P: Poetic Devices – Look for figurative language and sound devices.

E: Evaluate the author’s purpose – Based on what you know about the author, or the author’s tone, make an educated guess about the author’s purpose for writing the poem.