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Poetry Notes

Poetry Notes . Part 2. The poet is…. The one writing the story. The speaker is…. The one telling the story in the poem. Form. The way the poem looks. Stanzas Lines Rhyme Scheme Meter. Line.

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Poetry Notes

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  1. Poetry Notes Part 2

  2. The poet is… • The one writing the story.

  3. The speaker is… • The one telling the story in the poem.

  4. Form • The way the poem looks. • Stanzas • Lines • Rhyme Scheme • Meter

  5. Line • Lines can be of varying length. Some can be long, others can be short. Some poems have the same line lengths. Others have an assortment of line lengths. • Syllables • Meter

  6. Stanza • A group of lines put together by a single thought. • A stanza is like a paragraph in prose.

  7. Kinds of Stanzas • Couplet: 2 lines that rhyme • Triplet: 3 lines that have a rhyme scheme • Quatrain: 4 lines that have a particular rhyme scheme • Quintet:5 lines that have a rhyme scheme • Sestet: 6 lines that have a rhyme scheme • Septet: 7 lines that have a rhyme scheme • Octave: 8 lines that have a rhyme scheme.

  8. Sound Effects • Rhythm: The beat of the poem. • Rhythm is dictated through line lengths, punctuation, and syllables • Meter: Is the regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables • Foot: A foot is a basic unit of a meter.

  9. Types of Feet • Iambic: A foot consisting of two syllables where the first is short or unstressed and the second is long or stressed e.g. as in 'beSIDE'. • Rhyme: when words or phrases have similar sounds • End Rhyme: when words at end of lines rhyme • Internal Rhyme: when words within a line rhyme • Near Rhyme: Term used to describe a number of devices which come close to full rhyme but don't create the perfect chiming sound associated with words such as 'cat' and 'mat'. These devices include: assonance, consonance, half-rhyme and unaccented rhyme. • Rhyme Scheme: The pattern of how the ends of lines rhyme.

  10. Literary Devices • Onomatopoeia: The use of words that imitate the sound that the poet is trying to describe. Pow, Plop, Boom • Alliteration: the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of a word • Consonance: The effect created when words share the same stressed consonant sounds but where the vowels differ. • Assonance: The repetition of vowel sounds in the middle of words • Refrain: A line or phrase that recurs throughout a poem - especially at the end of stanzas

  11. Figurative Language • Simile: a comparison of 2 unlike things using the words “like” or “as” • Metaphor: a comparison of 2 unlike things • Extended Metaphor: a metaphor that is extended over several lines or throughout the whole poem. • Implied Metaphor: a metaphor that is not stated but is suggested.

  12. Hyperbole: an extreme exaggeration • Litotes: Ironic understatement • Understatement: opposite of a hyperbole. When you do not say the statement with its full intensity • Idiom: an expressionwhose meaning is not predictable from the usual meanings of its constituent elements, as kick the bucket  or hang one's head • Personification: giving inanimate objects human qualities • Symbolism: an object or word that have a literal and figurative meaning. • Ex: A light bulb: Literally is a light bulb but figuratively stands for ideas. • Allusion: a reference to something in literature, art, or history. • Imagery: when the author gives the reader a mental picture through sensory details.

  13. Types of Poetry • Sonnet: a 14 line poem written in iambic pentameter that rhymes • Narrative Poem: a long poem that tells a complete story • Epic: a narrative poem that is typically about • Ballad: can range from a simple song to a narrative. Ballad stanzas are made of a quatrain that have the 2nd and 4th line rhyming

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