Transcript Poetry

Poetry
Terms and Examples
Theme
• The meaning, moral, or
message about life or
human nature that is
communicated by a
literary work
– Example: The theme of
“The Monkey’s Paw”
might be that you
should be careful what
you wish for.
Form
• The way a poem’s
lines and words are
arranged on the
page is its form.
– Most common
forms are the
ballad, epic, ode,
sonnet, and free
verse.
Lines and Stanzas
• Poems are written in lines, which can
vary in length. The poet chooses the
line length to fit the rhythm, feeling,
or thought expressed in the poem.
• Lines are grouped together in
stanzas. These are sections of the
poem separated by a space.
Rhyme
• Repetition of sounds
at the end of words
(shell and well)
• Internal Rhyme:
rhyming words within
the same line
• End Rhyme: use of
rhymes at end of lines
• Pattern of end rhymes
in a poem is called the
rhyme scheme
Rhythm
• The pattern of sound
created by stressed
and unstressed
syllables in a line
• Stressed syllables are
word parts that are
read with emphasis,
while unstressed
syllables are less
emphasized
Repetition
• Sounds, words, phrases, or lines that
are stated or used more than once in
a poem.
• Used to emphasize an idea or convey
a certain meaning
• Happy, happy, happy, so happy!
Alliteration
• The repetition of
consonant sounds
at the beginnings
of words
– Example: No one
knows your name
Imagery
• Words and phrases
that appeal to the
five senses
• Poets use imagery
to create a picture
in the reader’s mind
• Example: The wet
green grass
gleamed.
Figurative Language
• Conveys a meaning beyond the
ordinary, literal meaning
• Simile, metaphor, personification
Simile
• A comparison of
two things with a
common quality
• Expressed using
the words like or
as
– Example: The dog
was as small as a
mouse.
– Example: The horse
was skinny like twig.
Metaphor
• Also a comparison
of two things with
a common quality
but it does not use
the words like or
as.
– Example: She is a
clown= she is crazy.
Personification
• When a poet
describes an animal
or object as if it
were human or had
human qualities
– Example: The tea
cups in Beauty and
the Beast are
examples of
personification.
Symbol
• A person, place, an
object, or an action
that stands for
something beyond
itself.
– Example: Bald Eagle
is a symbol for the
United States of
America.
Speaker
• The speaker is the voice that talks to
the reader in a poem like a narrator in a
story
• Not necessarily the poet
Voice
• The distinctive style or manner of
expression
• Can reveal much about the author’s
or narrator’s personality
Free Verse
• Free verse is
poetry without a
regular pattern of
rhyme, rhythm, or
meter. Free verse
is used for a
variety of
subjects.
Narrative Poetry
• Tells a story or
recounts events
• Includes a plot,
characters and
setting
• Epics and ballads
Ballad
• A type of narrative poem that tells a
story.
• Meant to be sung or recited
• Has a setting, a plot, and characters
• Most have regular patterns of
rhythm and rhyme
Epic
• A long narrative
poem about the
adventures of a
hero whose actions
reflect the ideals
and values of a
nation or group
Lyric Poetry
• Presents the
thoughts and
feelings of a single
speaker
• Sonnet, elegy, ode,
and free verse
Ode
• A type of lyric poem that addresses
broad, serious themes such as justice,
truth, or beauty
Sonnet
• A poem that has a formal structure,
containing fourteen lines and a
specific rhyme scheme and meter
• Means “little song” and can be used
for a variety of topics
Elegy
•
A type of lyric poem of mourning or
lamentation for the dead. Usually it
expresses sorrow over the death of
someone the poet admired, loved or
respected; sometimes it simply
mourns the passing of all life and
beauty.
Dramatic Poetry
• May also tell a story but focuses
more on character
• Soliloquies and monologues
Couplet Poem
• A two-lined poem that rhymes.
• We Jack o’ Lanterns have a song
That we like to sing all night long.
Try to write your own!