I. definition of poetry
Poetry is as universal as language and almost
as ancient. The most primitive people have used it and the most civilized have
cultivated it. In all ages and in all countries poetry has been written and
eagerly read or listened to by all kinds of people. The intelligent and the
sensitive individual appreciate it greatly and it has appealed, in its simpler
forms, to the uneducated and to children. Why? Firstly because gives pleasure,
People have read it, listened to it, or recited it because they liked it,
because it gave them enjoyment. But this is not the whole answer. Poetry in all
ages has been regarded as important, not simply as a form of amusement. Rather
it has been regarded as something central to existence, something having unique
value to the fully realized life, something without which we are spiritually
impoverished. To understand the reason for this we need to have an
understanding of what poetry because people have always been more successful at
appreciating poetry than at defining it.
Initially poetry might be defined as a kind of language
that says more and says it more intensely than does ordinary language. In order
to understand this fully, we need to understand what is that poetry “says.” For
language is employed on different occasions to say quite different kind of
things: in other words, language has different uses
It is primarily to communicate information that novels
and short stories and plays and poems are written. These exist to bring us a
sense and a perception of life, to widen and sharpen our contacts with
existence. Their concern is with experience. We all have an inner need to live
more deeply and fully with greater awareness, To know the experience of others
and to know better our own experience. The poet, form his own store of felt,
observed, or imagined experiences, selects, combines, and recognizes. He
creates significant new experiences for the reader--significant because focused
and formed--in which the reader can participate and that he may use to give him
a greater awareness and
understanding of his world. Literature, in other words, can be used
as a gear for stepping up the intensity and increasing the range of our
experience and as a glass for clarifying it. This is the literary use of
language, for literature is not only an aid to
living but a mean to living.
II Purpose of the Poem?
A third important question that we should ask ourselves
upon reading any poem is What is the central purpose of the poem? Our only
reliable evidence of the poem’s purpose is the poem itself. The purpose may be
to tell a story, to reveal human character, to impart a vivid impression of a
scene, to express a mood or emotion, or to convey vividly some idea or
attitude. Whatever the purpose is, we must determine it for ourselves and
define it mentally as precisely as possible. Only by relating the various
details in the poem to the central purpose or theme can we fully understand
their function and meaning. Only then can we begin to assess the value of the
poem and determine whether it is a good one or a poor one. In “The Man He
Killed” the central purpose is quite clear: It is to make us realize more
keenly the irrationality of war. The puzzlement of the speaker may be our
puzzlement. But even if we are able to give a more sophisticated answer than
his as to why men killed each other we ought still to have a greater awareness,
after reading the poem, of the fundamental irrationality in war that makes men
kill who have no grudge against one another and who might under different
circumstances show each other considerable kindness
III Reading Poetry
If you’re like most people, you haven’t read aloud since
the last time you read to a child or since you were in school. For many people,
reading aloud just doesn’t feel good maybe it conjures up all those bad
memories of being called on by a teacher to read in front of the rest of the
class. But it’s time to lose those fears. Because, after all, poetry is meant
to be read aloud. That’s right, aloud — as though you were delivering the poem
to an attentive audience. Why you should read poems aloud? Here are the three
most important reasons you should read poetry aloud:
a. Poets design their poems to be
read aloud. The earliest poetry was oral. People chanted it, sang it, recited
it — and they still do. From its earliest forms to the poems being written
today, poetry has kept its close alliance with speaking and singing. The music
of poetry — that is, its sounds and rhythms — is not just for the eye and the
mind, it’s meant to be given voice. In fact, as they write, most poets imagine
someone reading their poems aloud. Poetry is supposed to be a living thing, and
poets write accordingly, with an audience in mind.
b. You’ll experience the whole poem
if you read it aloud. Poems read aloud are different animals from poems read
silently. A big part of poetry is sound and rhythm — and the best way to get
the full impact of these important elements is to put them into action by
pronouncing them with your own throat, lungs, teeth, lips, and tongue. Sound
and rhythm don’t exist just for their own sakes, either; they exist to give you
pleasure (because humans naturally like music and rhythm in our poetry) and
lead you to the poem’s meanings. Commas, spaces between words, line endings,
and other pauses may hint at melancholy, hesitancy, or passion. Punctuation has
its traditional functions (exclamations! questions? wistfulness . . .), and it
often also is used in unexpected ways — or not used at all. You may miss all
these signals if you don’t read aloud.
c. You’ll understand and remember more if you
read aloud. Memory and understanding are everything. If you remember something
and understand it, it takes up long-term residence inside your brain. And then
you can use that knowledge as a building block to discover more and more about
the world of poetry.
IV element of poetry:
a. The music or sound of words
Words or portions of words can be
clustered or juxtaposed to achieve specific kinds of effects when we hear them.
The sounds that result can strike us as clever and pleasing, even soothing.
Others we dislike and strive to avoid. These various deliberate arrangements of
words have been identified.
Alliteration: Repeated consonant sounds at the beginning of words placed near
each other, usually on the same or adjacent lines. A somewhat looser
definition is that it is the use of the same consonant in any part of adjacent
words.
Example: fast
and furious
Example: Peter
and Andrew patted the pony at Ascot
In the second definition, both P and
T in the example are reckoned as alliteration. It is noted that this is a
very obvious device and needs to be handled with great restraint, except in
specialty forms such as limerick, cinquain, and humorous verse.
Assonance:
Repeated vowel sounds in words placed near each other, usually on the same or
adjacent lines. These should be in sounds that are accented, or
stressed, rather than in vowel sounds that are unaccented.
Example: He’s
a bruisin’ loser
In the second example above, the short A
sound in Andrew, patted, and Ascot
would be assonant.
Consonance:
Repeated consonant sounds at the ending of words placed near each other,
usually on the same or adjacent lines. These should be in sounds that
are accented, or stressed, rather than in vowel sounds that are unaccented.
This produces a pleasing kind of near-rhyme.
Example: boats
into the past
Example: cool
soul
Cacophony A
discordant series of harsh, unpleasant sounds helps to convey disorder. This is
often furthered by the combined effect of the meaning and the difficulty of
pronunciation.
Example: My
stick fingers click with a snicker
And, chuckling, they knuckle the keys;
Light-footed, my steel feelers flicker
And pluck from these keys melodies.
—“Player Piano,” John Updike
Euphony: A
series of musically pleasant sounds, conveying a sense of harmony and beauty to
the language.
Example: Than
Oars divide the Ocean,
Too silver for a seam—
Or Butterflies, off Banks of Noon
Leap, plashless as they swim.
— “A Bird Came Down the Walk,” Emily
Dickenson (last stanza)
Onomatopoeia: Words that sound like their meanings. In Hear the steady tick
of the old hall clock, the word tick sounds like the action of the clock,
If assonance or alliteration can be onomatopoeic, as the sound ‘ck’ is repeated
in tick and clock, so much the better. At least sounds should suit the tone –
heavy sounds for weightiness, light for the delicate. Tick is a light
word, but transpose the light T to its heavier counterpart, D;
and transpose the light CK to its heavier counterpart G, and tick
becomes the much more solid and down to earth dig.
Example: boom, buzz, crackle, gurgle, hiss, pop, sizzle, snap, swoosh, whir,
zip
Repetition: The purposeful re-use of words and phrases for an effect.
Sometimes, especially with longer phrases that contain a different key word
each time, this is called parallelism. It has been a central part
of poetry in many cultures. Many of
the Psalms use this device as one of their unifying elements.
Example: I was glad; so very, very glad.
Example: Half a league, half a league,
Half a league onward…
…
Cannon to right of them,
Cannon to left of them,
Cannon in front of them
Volley’d and thunder’d…
Rhyme:
This is the one device most commonly associated with poetry by the general
public. Words that have different beginning sounds but whose endings sound
alike, including the final vowel sound and everything following it, are said to
rhyme.
Example: time, slime, mime
Double rhymes include the final two syllables. Example: revival, arrival,
survival
Triple rhymes include the final three syllables. Example: greenery,
machinery, scenery
A variation which has been used
effectively is called slant rhyme, or half rhyme. If only the final
consonant sounds of the words are
the same, but the initial consonants and the vowel sounds are different, then
the rhyme is called a slant rhyme or half rhyme. When this
appears in the middle of lines rather than at the end, it is called consonance.
Example: soul,
oil, foul; taut, sat, knit
Another variation which is
occasionally used is called near rhyme. If the final vowel sounds are the same,
but the final consonant sounds are slightly different, then the rhyme is called
a near rhyme.
Example: fine, rhyme; poem, goin’
Less effective but sometimes used
are sight rhymes. Words which are spelled the same (as if they rhymed), but are
pronounced differently are called sight rhymes or eye rhymes.
Example: enough, cough, through, bough
Rhythm: Although the general public is seldom directly conscious of it,
nearly everyone responds on some level to the organization of speech rhythms
(verbal stresses) into a regular pattern of accented syllables separated by
unaccented syllables. Rhythm helps to distinguish poetry from prose.
Example: i THOUGHT i SAW a PUSsyCAT.
Such patterns are sometimes referred
to as meter. Meter is the organization of voice patterns, in terms of
both the arrangement of stresses and their frequency of repetition per line of
verse.
Poetry is organized by the division
of each line into “feet,” metric units which each consist of a particular arrangement
of strong and weak stresses. The most common metric unit is the iambic, in
which an unstressed syllable is followed by a stressed one (as in the words reverse
and compose).
Scansion is the conscious measure of the pattern of stressed and unstressed
syllables in a line of poetry. Stressed syllables are labeled with an accent
mark: / Unstressed syllables are labeled with a dash: –
Metrical feet may be two or three
syllables in length, and are divided by slashes: |
There are five basic rhythms:
Pattern Name Example
– / Iamb/Iambic invite
/ – Trochee/Trochaic deadline
– – / Anapest/Anapestic to the beach
/ – – Dactyl/Dactylic frequently
/ / Spondee/Spondaic true blue
Meter is measured by the number of feet
in a line. Feet are named by Greek prefix number words attached to “meter.” A
line with five feet is called pentameter; thus, a line of five iambs is known
as “iambic pentameter” (the most common metrical form in English poetry, and
the one favored by Shakespeare).
The most common line lengths are:
monometer: one foot tetrameter: four feet
heptameter: seven feet
dimeter: two feet pentameter: five feet
octameter: eight feet
trimeter: three feet hexameter: six feet
Naturally, there is a degree of variation
from line to line, as a rigid adherence to the meter results in unnatural or
monotonous language. A skillful poet manipulates breaks in the prevailing
rhythm of a poem for particular effects.
The meanings of words
Most words convey several meanings or
shades of meaning at the same time. It is the poet’s job to find words which,
when used in relation to other words in the poem, will carry the precise
intention of thought. Often, some of the more significant words may carry
several layers or “depths” of meaning at once. The ways in which the meanings
of words are used can be identified.
Allegory:
A representation of an abstract or spiritual meaning. Sometimes it can be a
single word or phrase, such as the name of a character or place. Often, it is a
symbolic narrative that has not only a literal meaning, but a larger one
understood only after reading the entire story or poem
Allusion:
A brief reference to some person, historical event, work of art, or Biblical or
mythological situation or character.
Ambiguity: A word or phrase that can mean more than one thing, even in its
context. Poets often search out such words to add richness to their work.
Often, one meaning seems quite readily apparent, but other, deeper and darker
meanings, await those who contemplate the poem.
Example: Robert
Frost’s ‘The Subverted Flower’
Analogy: A
comparison, usually something unfamiliar with something familiar.
Example: The
plumbing took a maze of turns where even water got lost.
Apostrophe:
Speaking directly to a real or imagined listener or inanimate object;
addressing that person or thing by name.
Example: O
Captain! My Captain! our fearful trip is done…
Cliché:
Any figure of speech that was once clever and original but through overuse has
become outdated. If you’ve heard more than two or three other people say it
more than two or three times, chances are the phrase is too timeworn to be
useful in your writing.
Example: busy
as a bee
Connotation: The emotional, psychological or social overtones of a word; its
implications and associations apart from its literal meaning. Often, this is
what distinguishes the precisely correct word from one that is merely
acceptable.
Contrast:
Closely arranged things with strikingly different characteristics.
Example: He
was dark, sinister, and cruel; she was radiant, pleasant, and kind.
Denotation:
The dictionary definition of a word; its literal meaning apart from any
associations or connotations. Students must exercise caution when beginning to
use a thesaurus, since often the words that are clustered together may share a denotative
meaning, but not a connotative one, and the substitution of a word
can sometimes destroy the mood, and even the meaning, of a poem.
Euphemism:
An understatement, used to lessen the effect of a statement; substituting
something innocuous for something that might be offensive or hurtful.
Example: She
is at rest. (meaning, she’s dead)
Hyperbole:
An outrageous exaggeration used for effect.
Example: He
weighs a ton.
Irony: A
contradictory statement or situation to reveal a reality different from what
appears to be true.
Example: Wow,
thanks for expensive gift...let’s see: did it come with a Fun Meal or the
Burger King equivalent?
Metaphor:
A direct comparison between two unlike things, stating that one is the
other or does the action of the other.
Example: He’s
a zero. Example: Her fingers danced across the keyboard.
Metonymy:
A figure of speech in which a person, place, or thing is referred to by
something closely
associated with it.
Example: The
White House stated today that... Example: The Crown reported today
that...
Oxymoron:
A combination of two words that appear to contradict each other.
Example: a
pointless point of view; bittersweet
Paradox: A
statement in which a seeming contradiction may reveal an unexpected truth.
Example: The
hurrier I go the behinder I get.
Personification: Attributing human characteristics to an inanimate object, animal,
or abstract idea.
Example: The
days crept by slowly, sorrowfully.
Pun: Word
play in which words with totally different meanings have similar or identical
sounds.
Example: Like
a firefly in the rain, I’m de-lighted.
Simile: A
direct comparison of two unlike things using “like” or “as.”
Example: He’s
as dumb as an ox.
Example: Her
eyes are like comets.
Symbol: An
ordinary object, event, animal, or person to which we have attached
extraordinary meaning and
significance – a flag to represent a
country, a lion to represent courage, a wall to symbolize separation.
Example: A
small cross by the dangerous curve on the road reminded all of Johnny’s death.
Synecdoche:
Indicating a person, object, etc. by letting only a certain part represent the
whole.
Example: All
hands on deck.
Arranging the words Words follow each
other in a sequence determined by the poet. In order to discuss the
arrangements that result, certain terms have been applied to various aspects of
that arrangement process. Although in some
ways these sequences seem arbitrary and
mechanical, in another sense they help to determine the nature of the poem.
These various ways of organizing words have been identified.
Point of View: The author’s point of view concentrates on the vantage point of
the speaker, or “teller” of
the story or poem. This may be considered
the poem’s “voice” — the pervasive presence behind the
overall work. This is also sometimes
referred to as the persona.
• 1st Person: the speaker is a character
in the story or poem and tells it from his/her
perspective (uses “I”).
• 3rd Person limited: the speaker is not
part of the story, but tells about the other characters
through the limited perceptions of one
other person.
• 3rd Person omniscient: the speaker is
not part of the story, but is able to “know” and
describe what all characters are
thinking.
Line: The
line is fundamental to the perception of poetry, marking an important visual
distinction from prose. Poetry is arranged into a series of units that do not
necessarily correspond to sentences, but rather to a series of metrical feet.
Generally, but not always, the line is printed as one single line on the page.
If it occupies more than one line, its remainder is usually indented to
indicate that it is a continuation.
There is a natural tendency when reading
poetry to pause at the end of a line, but the careful reader will follow the
punctuation to find where natural pauses should occur.
In traditional verse forms, the length of
each line is determined by convention, but in modern poetry the poet has more
latitude for choice.
Verse: One
single line of a poem arranged in a metrical pattern. Also, a piece of poetry
or a particular form of poetry such as free verse, blank verse, etc., or
the art or work of a poet.
The popular use of the word verse for
a stanza or associated group of metrical lines is not in accordance with the
best usage. A stanza is a group of verses.
Stanza: A
division of a poem created by arranging the lines into a unit, often repeated
in the same pattern of meter and rhyme throughout the poem; a unit of poetic
lines (a “paragraph” within the poem). The stanzas within a poem are separated
by blank lines.
Stanzas in modern poetry, such as free
verse, often do not have lines that are all of the same length and
meter, nor even the same number of lines
in each stanza. Stanzas created by such irregular line groupings
are often dictated by meaning, as in
paragraphs of prose.
Stanza Forms: The names given to describe the number of lines in a stanzaic unit,
such as: couplet (2),tercet (3), quatrain (4), quintet (5), sestet (6),
septet (7), and octave (8). Some stanzas follow a set rhyme
scheme and meter in addition to the number of lines and are given specific
names to describe them, such as, ballad meter, ottava rima, rhyme
royal, terza rima, and Spenserian stanza. Stanza forms are also a
factor in the categorization of whole poems described as following a fixed
form.
Rhetorical Question: A question solely for effect, which does not require an answer. By
the implication the
answer is obvious, it is a means of
achieving an emphasis stronger than a direct statement.
Example: Could
I but guess the reason for that look?
Example: O,
Wind,
If Winter comes, can Spring be far
behind?
Rhyme Scheme: The pattern established by the arrangement of rhymes in a stanza
or poem, generally described by using letters of the alphabet to denote the
recurrence of rhyming lines, such as the ababbcc of the Rhyme Royal stanza
form.
Capital letters in the alphabetic rhyme
scheme are used for the repeating lines of a refrain; the letters x and y
indicate unrhymed lines.
In quatrains, the popular rhyme scheme of
abab is called alternate rhyme or cross rhyme. The abba
scheme is called envelope rhyme, and another one frequently used is xaxa
(This last pattern, when working with students, is generally easier
for them to understand when presented as abcb, as they
associate matched letters with rhymed
words).
Enjambment:
The continuation of the logical sense — and therefore the grammatical
construction —
beyond the end of a line of poetry. This
is sometimes done with the title, which in effect becomes the
first line of the poem.
Form: The
arrangement or method used to convey the content, such as free verse, ballad,
haiku, etc. In other words, the “way-it-is-said.” A variably interpreted
term, however, it sometimes applies to details within the composition of a
text, but is probably used most often in reference to the structural
characteristics of a work as it compares to (or differs from) established modes
of conventionalized arrangements.
• Open: poetic
form free from regularity and consistency in elements such as rhyme, line
length, and metrical form
• Closed: poetic
form subject to a fixed structure and pattern
• Blank Verse: unrhymed iambic pentameter (much of the plays of Shakespeare are
written in this form)
• Free Verse: lines with no prescribed pattern or structure — the poet determines
all the variables as seems appropriate for each poem
• Couplet:
a pair of lines, usually rhymed; this is the shortest stanza
• Heroic Couplet: a pair of rhymed lines in iambic pentameter (traditional heroic epic
form)
• Quatrain: a four-line stanza, or a grouping of four lines of verse
Fixed Form:
A poem which follows a set pattern of meter, rhyme scheme, stanza form, and
refrain (if there is one), is called a fixed form.
Most poets feel a need for familiarity
and practice with established forms as essential to learning the craft, but
having explored the techniques and constraints of each, they go on to
experiment and extend their imaginative creativity in new directions. A partial
listing includes:
• Ballad: a
narrative poem written as a series of quatrains in which lines of iambic
tetrameter
alternate with iambic trimeter with an xaxa,
xbxb rhyme scheme with frequent use of repetition and often including a
refrain. The “story” of a ballad can be a wide range of subjects but frequently
deals with folklore or popular legends. They are written in a straight-forward manner,
seldom with detail, but always with graphic simplicity and force. Most ballads
are suitable for singing: “Barbara Allen” is an example.
Many of the oldest ballads were first
written and performed by minstrels as court
entertainment. Folk ballads are of
unknown origin and are usually lacking in artistic finish. Because they are
handed down by oral tradition, folk ballads are subject to variations and continual
change. Other types of ballads include literary ballads, combining the
natures of epic and lyric poetry, which are written by known authors, often in
the style and form of the folk ballad, such as Keats’ ‘La Belle Dame sans
Merci.”
• Ballade: a French form, it consists of three seven or eight-line stanzas
using no more than three recurrent rhymes, with an identical refrain after each
stanza and a closing envoi repeating the rhymes of the last four lines of the
stanza
• Concrete Poetry: also known as pattern poetry or shaped verse, these
are poems that are printed on the page so that they form a recognizable outline
related to the subject, thus conveying or extending the meaning of the words.
Pattern poetry retains its meaning when read aloud, whereas the essence of
concrete poetry lies in its appearance on the page rather than in the words; it
is intended to be perceived as a visual whole and often cannot be effective
when read aloud. This form has had brief popularity at several periods in
history.
• Epigram: a pithy, sometimes satiric, couplet or quatrain comprising a single
thought or event and often aphoristic with a witty or humorous turn of thought
• Epitaph: a brief poem or statement in memory of someone who is deceased, used
as, or
suitable for, a tombstone inscription;
now, often witty or humorous and written without intent of actual funerary use
• Haiku: a
Japanese form of poetry consisting of three unrhymed lines of five, seven, and
five syllables. The elusive flavor of the form, however, lies more in its touch
and tone than in its syllabic structure. Deeply imbedded in Japanese culture
and strongly influenced by Zen Buddhism, haiku are very brief descriptions of
nature that convey some implicit insight or essence of a moment. Traditionally,
they contain either a direct or oblique reference to a season
• Limerick:
a light or humorous form of five chiefly anapestic
verses of which lines one, two and five are of three feet and lines three and
four are of two feet, with a rhyme scheme of aabba. Named for a town in Ireland of that
name, the limerick was popularized by Edward
Lear in his Book of Nonsense published
in 1846, and is generally considered the only fixed form of English origin.
While the final line of Lear’s limericks
usually was a repetition of the first line, modern
limericks generally use the final line
for clever witticisms and word play. Their content also frequently tends toward
the ribald and off-color.
• Lyric: derived
from the Greek word for lyre, lyric poetry was originally designed to be sung.
One of the three main groups of poetry (the others being narrative and
dramatic), lyric verse is the most frequently used modern form, including all
poems in which the speaker’s ardent expression of a (usually single) emotional
element predominates. Ranging from complex thoughts to the simplicity of
playful wit, the melodic imagery of skillfully written lyric poetry evokes in
the reader’s mind the recall of similar emotional experiences.
• Ode: any
of several stanzaic forms more complex than the lyric, with intricate rhyme
schemes and irregular number of lines, generally of considerable length, always
written in a style marked by a rich, intense expression of an elevated thought
praising a person or object. “Ode to a Nightingale”
is an example.
• Pantoum: derived from the Malayan pantun, it consists of a varying
number of four-line stanzas with lines rhyming alternately; the second and
fourth lines of each stanza repeated to form the first
and third lines of the succeeding stanza,
with the first and third lines of the first stanza forming the second and
fourth of the last stanza, but in reverse order, so that the opening and
closing lines of the poem are identical.
• Rondeau: a fixed form used mostly in light or witty verse, usually consisting
of fifteen octo- or decasyllabic lines in three stanzas, with only two rhymes
used throughout. A word or words from the first part of the first line are used
as a (usually unrhymed) refrain ending the second and third stanzas, so the
rhyme scheme is aabba aabR aabbaR.
An example is “ In Flanders Fields,” by
Lt. Col. John McCrae.
• Sestina: a fixed form consisting of six 6-line (usually unrhymed) stanzas in
which the end words of the first stanza recur as end words of the following
five stanzas in a successively rotating order, and as the middle and end words
of each of the lines of a concluding envoi in the form of a tercet.
The usual ending word order for a sestina
is as follows:
First stanza, 1- 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6
Second stanza, 6 - 1 - 5 - 2 - 4 - 3
Third stanza, 3 - 6 - 4 - 1 - 2 - 5
Fourth stanza, 5 - 3 - 2 - 6 - 1 - 4
Fifth stanza, 4 - 5 - 1 - 3 - 6 - 2
Sixth stanza, 2 - 4 - 6 - 5 - 3 - 1
Concluding tercet:
middle of first line - 2, end of first
line - 5
middle of second line - 4, end of second
line - 3
middle if third line - 6, end of third
line - 1
• Sonnet:
a fourteen line poem in iambic pentameter with a prescribed rhyme scheme; its
subject was traditionally love. Three variations are found frequently in
English, although others are occasionally seen.
• Shakespearean Sonnet: a style of sonnet used by Shakespeare with a rhyme scheme of abab
cdcd efef gg
• Italian (Petrarchan) Sonnet: a form of sonnet made popular by Petrarch with a rhyme scheme of abbaabba
cdecde or cdcdcd
• Spenserian Sonnet: a variant of the Shakespearean form in which the quatrains are
linked with a
chain or interlocked rhyme scheme, abab
bcbc cdcd ee.
• Sonnet Sequence: a series of sonnets in which there is a discernable unifying theme,
while each retains its own structural independence. All of Shakespeare’s
sonnets, for example, were part of a sequence.
• Triolet: a poem or stanza of eight lines in which the first line is repeated
as the fourth and seventh lines, and the second line as the eighth, with a
rhyme scheme of ABaAabAB, as in Adelaide Crapsey’s “Song” (the capital
letters in the rhyme scheme indicate the repetition of identical lines).
• Villanelle: a poem consisting of five 3-line stanzas followed by a quatrain and
having only two rhymes. In the stanzas following the first stanza, the first
and third lines of the first stanza are repeated alternately as refrains. They
are the final two lines of the concluding quatrain. The villanelle gives a
pleasant impression of simple spontaneity, as in Edwin Arlington Robinson’s
“The House on the Hill.”
the IMAGES of words
A poet uses words more consciously than
any other writer. Although poetry often deals with deep human emotions or
philosophical thought, people generally don’t respond very strongly to abstract
words, even the words describing such emotions and thoughts. The poet, then,
must embed within his work those words which do carry strong
visual and sensory impact, words which are fresh and spontaneous but vividly
descriptive. He must carefully pick and choose words that are just right. It is
better to show the reader than to
merely tell him.
Imagery:
The use of vivid language to generate ideas and/or evoke mental images, not
only of the visual
sense, but of sensation and emotion as
well. While most commonly used in reference to figurative language, imagery can
apply to any component of a poem that evoke sensory experience and emotional response,
and also applies to the concrete things so brought to mind. Poetry works it
magic by the way it uses words to evoke “images” that carry depths of meaning.
The poet’s carefully described
impressions of sight, sound, smell, taste and touch can be transferred to the
thoughtful reader through imaginative use and combinations of diction. In
addition to its more tangible initial impact, effective imagery has the
potential to tap the inner wisdom of the reader to arouse meditative and
inspirational responses. Related images are often clustered or scattered
throughout a work, thus serving to create a particular
mood or tone. Images of disease, corruption, and death, for
example, are recurrent patterns shaping our perceptions of Shakespeare’s Hamlet.
Examples:
• Sight:
Smoke mysteriously puffed out from the clown’s ears.
• Sound:
Tom placed his ear tightly against the wall; he could hear a faint but distinct
thump thump thump.
• Touch:
The burlap wall covering scraped against the little boy’s cheek.
• Taste: A
salty tear ran across onto her lips.
• Smell:
Cinnamon! That’s what wafted into his nostrils.
Synesthesia: An attempt to fuse different senses by describing one kind of
sense impression in words normally used to describe another.
Example: The
sound of her voice was sweet.
Example: a
loud aroma, a velvety smile
Tone, Mood:
The means by which a poet reveals attitudes and feelings, in the style of
language or expression of thought used to develop the subject. Certain tones
include not only irony and satire, but may be loving, condescending, bitter,
pitying, fanciful, solemn, and a host of other emotions and attitudes. Tone can
also refer to the overall mood of the poem itself, in the sense of a pervading
atmosphere intended to influence the readers’ emotional response and foster
expectations of the conclusion. Another use of tone is in reference to pitch or
to the demeanor of a speaker as interpreted through inflections of the voice;
in poetry, this is conveyed through the use of connotation, diction, figures of
speech, rhythm and other elements of poetic construction
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