Top Banner
Poetry
16

Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

Mar 26, 2015

Download

Documents

Aaron Jordan
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: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

Poetry

Page 2: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

Poetry—concentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound

Prose—everyday language

Page 3: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

Metrical Writing

Meter—regular rhythm in language

Broken into Syllables:U Unstressed/ Stressed

Page 4: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

Metrical Lines

1. A one-foot line is called monometer.2. A two-foot line is called dimeter.3. A three-foot line is called trimeter.4. A four-foot line is called tetrameter.5. A five-foot line is called pentameter.6. A six-foot line is called hexameter. When it is a

pure iambic line, it may be called an alexandrine.7. A seven-foot line is called heptameter.8. A eight-foot line is called octameter.

Page 5: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

Metrical Feet & Symbols

1. iamb: a light stress followed by a heavy stress. U /

2. trochee: a heavy stress followed by a light stress. / U

3. dactyl: a heavy stress followed by two light stresses. / U U

4. anapest: two light stresses followed by a heavy stress. U U /

5. spondee: two equal stresses. - -

Page 6: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

This above all to thine own self

be true.

Page 7: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

U / U / U / U /This above all to thine own self U /be true.

Page 8: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

U / U / U / U /This above all to thine own self U /be true.

Page 9: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

Pentameter

Penta—5Meter—regular rhythm in language

Pentameter—a regular rhythm reoccurring five times in one line of poetry

Iambic Pentameter—A line of poetry consisting of five iambs

Page 10: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

Rhyme Scheme

The frequency or pattern where the last word in a line of poetry rhymes with the last word in other lines.

When the stars threw down their spears aAnd water’d heaven with their tears, aDid He smile His work to see? bDid He who made the lamb make thee? b

(William Blake, The Tyger)

Page 11: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

Blank Verse

Unrhymed Iambic Pentameter

The last a line of poetry consisting ofword of five iambseach linedoesn’trhyme

Page 12: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

Length, Breadth, & Rhyme

• Couplet aa bb cc dd, etc.• Tercet, ot Triplet aaa bbb ccc ddd, etc.• Quatrain abab cdcd, etc.• Terza Rima aba bcb cdc ded, etc.• Spenserian Stanza abab bcbc c

(the first eight lines are always iambic pentameter; the final line is always an alexandrine).

Page 13: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

Sonnet

The sonnet is a poem of fourteen lines; traditionally it uses iambic pentameter.

• Italian sonnet abba abba cdd cee• English sonnet abab cdcd efef gg

Page 14: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

Sounds

• Alliteration—the repetition of the initial sound of words in a line or lines of verse.

• Assonance—the repetition of vowel sounds within words in a line or lines of verse.

• Onomatopoeia—the use of a word that, through its sound as well as its sense, represents what it defines.

Page 15: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

Figurative Language

• The language of the poem is also the language of one thing compared to another thing.

• In figurative language, a familiar thing is linked to an unknown thing, as a key, to unlock the mystery, or some part of the mystery, of the thing that is unknown.

Page 16: Poetry. Poetryconcentrated language consisting of rhythm and sound Proseeveryday language.

• Simile—a comparison using “like” or “as”• Metaphor—an implicit rather than an explicit

comparison.• Personification—when one gives a physical

characteristic or innate quality of animation to something that is inanimate, or to an abstraction.

• Allusion—a reference to something that belongs properly to a world beyond the specific sphere of the poem.

• Universal Images—images, characters, motifs, or patterns that recur in the myths, dreams, oral traditions, songs literature, and other texts of peoples widely separated by time and place.

Figurative Language