1 / 19

5 Easy Pieces

5 Easy Pieces. The first step is to think of a person you know well. The second step is to imagine a place where you find that person. Now you are ready for the five pieces. Describe the person’s hands. Describe something he or she is doing with the hands.

rutherfords
Download Presentation

5 Easy Pieces

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 5 Easy Pieces

  2. The first step is to think of a person you know well.The second step is to imagine a place where you find that person.Now you are ready for the five pieces.

  3. Describe the person’s hands. • Describe something he or she is doing with the hands. • Use a metaphor or simile to say something about some exotic place. • Mention what you would want to ask this person in the context of 2 and 3, above. • The person looks up or toward you, notices you there, gives an answer that suggests he or she only gets part of what you asked.

  4. Short, thick, calloused—his sweaty hand darkens the lilac silk dress where he rests his hand on my leg • constantly sharpening knives— pocket knives, kitchen knives, hunting knives • Exotic places are like a million dollars—I know they exist, but I will probably never see one • Why won’t you sharpen your mind by reading a book with me on an exotic island? • The sharpening stops. He looks up. You want to go to Wal-Mart?

  5. Acrostic Poem • An acrostic poem uses the letters in a topic to begin each line. All lines of the poem should relate to or describe the subject. Shines brightly Up in the sky Nice and warm on my skin

  6. Alphabet Poetry • Free verse • Has a title • Uses the familiar ABCs • Focuses on a particular topic chosen by the author/poet • Selects words that describe the topic, one for every letter of the alphabet • Arranges the words in alphabetical order • Poet decides how many words go on each line • Poet may use poetic license – the word used may not be spelled correctly to fit in the spot, but it sounds like it fits – for example, xceptional could be used for exceptional or xciting for exciting or xit for exit

  7. Snowflakes Astonishingly beautifulCold, dartingExciting frostGraceful heavensIcy jewelsKeen laceMajestic needles of pretty, quiet,    Raining snowTurning underVibrant WindsXciting,yearlyZany

  8. The implication ABC poetry may initially appear easy BUT all of you must utilize a thesaurus (this is an expand-your-vocabulary exercise)

  9. Airplanes goBack and forthCovering the landscape of ourDear planetEarthFlying high above theGround to soaring newHeightsIn all types of weatherJust perfect or aKind of cloudy nightLifting its wingsMoving through the airNice and peacefulOver our headsPilots bring usQuickly to our destinationsRome, Japan, and otherSpecial placesTraveling is myUltimate favorite activityVanishing off to a new placeWishing I could fly every dayX marks the spot I will goYelling with excitementZipping across the country

  10. Ultimate Challenge • Can you imbed (meaning insert) an acrostic poem within an alphabet poem? • There are several implications associated with this challenge. • most words aren’t written in alphabetical order, now what? • What are other foreseeable challenges?

  11. Basic Elements of Poetry Rhythm This is the music made by the statements of the poem, which includes the syllables in the lines. The best method of understanding this is to read the poem aloud, and understand the stressed and unstressed syllables. Listen for the sounds and the music made when we hear the lines spoken aloud. How do the words resonate with each other? How do the words flow when they are linked with one another? Does sound right? Do the words fit with each other? These are the things you consider while studying the rhythm of the poem.

  12. Meter This is the basic structural make-up of the poem. Do the syllables match with each other? Every line in the poem must adhere to this structure. A poem is made up of blocks of lines, which convey a single strand of thought. Within those blocks, a structure of syllables which follow the rhythm has to be included. This is the meter or the metrical form of poetry.

  13. Iambic Pentameter When I..|..con SID..|..erHOW..|..my LIFE..|..is SPENT

  14. Expectations Poems are like people. They are multi-dimensional. It takes some time to get to know them. They evoke feelings. Sometimes they make you feel frustrated, bored, sad, relaxed, bitter, humorous. Sometimes you just don’t get them. But people, like poems, deserve cordial respect.

  15. A Way to approach poetry

  16. Who? • Who is the speaker of the poem? • What? • What is the situation? • What are the figures of speech? (refer to literary terms) • What is the theme? Tone? Mood? • How? • How do you know what the situation is? (cite the poem) • How is the theme, tone, and mood accomplished? • Where? • Where does the situation take place? • When? • When are you (as the reader) entering the poem? Past, present, future? • Why? • So what? Why is this worth reading? What do we gain?

More Related