Transcript Poetry

Poetry
Vocabulary
1. Alliteration:
– Repetition of initial consonant
sounds
– Example: Sister Suzy sat on the
seashore until suddenly she was
swallowed by a shark.
2. Allusion:
– A reference to a well-known
person, place, event, literary
work, or work of art
3. Ballad:
– A song-like poem that tells a
story
4.Blank Verse:
– Poetry written in unrhymed,
iambic pentameter.
5.Concrete Poem:
– A poem with a shape that
suggests its subject
– Example: George Herbert’s
Easter Wings and The Alter
6. Figurative Language:
– Writing that is not meant
to be taken literally
– Example: He made me so
mad I wanted to die.
7. Free Verse:
– Poetry not written in a
regular rhythmical pattern
or meter
8. Image:
–
A word or phrase that appeals to
one or more of the five senses
9. Lyric Poem:
–
Highly musical verse that expresses
the observations and feelings of a
single speaker
10. Metaphor:
–
–
A figure of speech in which
something is described as though it
were something else
Example: He is such a pig when he eats!
11. Mood:
–
The feeling created in the reader by
a literary work
12. Onomatopoeia:
–
–
The use of words that imitate sounds
Example: The buzz of the bee was very
loud.
13. Personification:
–
–
A type of figurative language in which
a non-human subject is given human
characteristics
Example: The tree waved excitedly in
the wind.
14. Repetition:
–
The use, more than once, of any
element of language
15. Rhyme:
–
–
Repetition of sounds at the end of
words
Example: Roses are red, violets are
blue…..
16. Rhyme Scheme:
– A regular pattern of rhyming
words in a poem
17. Rhythm:
–
Pattern of beats or stresses in
spoken or written language
18. Simile:
– A figure of speech that uses
like or as to make a direct
comparison between two
unlike ideas
My love is like a red rose.
19. Stanza:
–
A formal division of lines in a
poem considered as a unit
20. Motif – Main or
reoccurring theme.
21. Extended
Metaphor – a comparison
developed over several
lines of poetry.
22. Pun – Double
23. Confessional poetry –
confession of an activity or
an emotion.
24. Elegy – Pays tribute to a
person (usually dead)
25. Imagist poetry –
uses lots of images to paint
a picture for the reader.
Humor
• Humor in poetry can arise
from a number of sources:
– Surprise
– Exaggeration
– Bringing together of
unrelated things
• Most funny poems have two
things in common:
– Rhythm
– Rhyme
Rhythm & Rhyme
• Using more spirited language makes
humorous situations even more humorous
“The Porcupine”
By Ogden Nash
Any hound a porcupine nudges
Can’t be blamed for harboring grudges.
I know one hound that laughed all winter
At a porcupine that sat on a splinter.
If you take away the rhythm
and rhyme, the humor vanishes.
Any hound that touches a porcupine
Can’t be blamed for holding a grudge
I know one hound that laughed all
winter long
At a porcupine that sat on a piece of
wood
Limericks
• A limerick is a poem of five lines
• The first, second, and fifth lines
have three rhythmic beats and rhyme
with one another.
• The third and fourth lines have two
beats and rhyme with one another.
• They are always light-hearted,
humorous poems.
Limericks
There once was a man with no hair.
He gave everyone quite a scare.
He got some Rogaine,
Grew out a mane,
And now he resembles a bear!
Limerick About a Bee
I wish that my room had a floor,
I don’t care so much for a door.
But this walking around
Without touching the ground
Is getting to be quite a bore.
Another Limerick
There once was a very small mouse
Who lived in a very small house,
The ocean’s spray
Washed it away,
All that was left was her blouse!
You will create a limerick
similar to this one…
There once was a man from Beijing.
All his life he hoped to be King.
So he put on a crown,
Which quickly fell down.
That small silly man from Beijing.
Fill in the blanks and
create your own Limerick.
There once was a _____ from _____.
All the while she/he hoped ________.
So she/he ____________________,
And ________________________,
That _________ from ___________.
The class Limerick:
There once was a _____ from _____.
All the while she/he hoped ________.
So she/he ____________________,
And ________________________,
That _________ from ___________.
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