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Poetry

Poetry. Ms. Dietsch. Purpose of Poetry . Poetry has existed before most people were literate. It was used to tell stories (orally) It has developed into many different forms over the years- and more recently has become a lot less structured. Typically, poetry is meant to be read aloud.

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Poetry

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  1. Poetry Ms. Dietsch

  2. Purpose of Poetry • Poetry has existed before most people were literate. • It was used to tell stories (orally) • It has developed into many different forms over the years- and more recently has become a lot less structured. • Typically, poetry is meant to be read aloud.

  3. Types of Poems You may already know: • Haiku – a three-line Japanese poetic form in the lines follow the pattern of five syllables in the first line, seven syllables in the second line, and five syllables in the third line. • Limerick – a five-line poem that follows a specific rhyme scheme and rhythm. The first, second, and fifth lines rhyme. Third and fourth lines rhyme. Limericks are usually funny or silly. • Lines 1, 2, & 5= 8 syllables • Lines 3 & 4= 5 syllables

  4. Types of Poems • Lyric – a poem that express the speaker’s thoughts or feelings and creates a single, imaginative impression on the reader. Many poems can be classified as lyric poems including sonnets, ballads, and odes. Originally, lyric poems were set to music (Greeks played the lyre while singing the poem). • Ballad – a poem that tells a story; ballads are usually sung • Ode – a long, serious poem in praise of something • Sonnet – a very structured fourteen-line poem that follows a specific rhyme structure and rhythm. • Italian sonnet-an eight-line octave and a six-line sestet, rhyming abbaabbacdecde or abbaabba cd cdcd. • English sonnet or Shakespearean sonnet- arranged as three quatrians and a final couplet, rhyming: ababcdcdefefgg

  5. Types of Poems (not as structured) • Narrative poem – a poem that tells the sequence of events of a story. • Free verse – poetry that doesn’t follow any specific patterns in rhythm, rhyme scheme, or line length; free verse may contain rhymes, but they are not used in a prescribed manner

  6. Types of Poems: • Found Poem- • Found poems take existing texts and refashion them, reorder them, and present them as poems. The literary equivalent of a collage, found poetry is often made from newspaper articles, street signs, graffiti, speeches, letters, or even other poems. • Regular • Blackout Poetry

  7. Poetry Terms: • Form • Sound • Literary Elements • Figures of Speech or Figurative Language

  8. Poetic Form Terms: • Stress- is the emphasis that falls on certain syllables and not others; the arrangement of stresses within a poem is the foundation of poetic rhythm. • Rhythm- (the beat) The recurrence of accent or stress in lines of verse • Meter-The measured pattern of rhythmic accents in poems • iamb- one unstressed syllable, followed by one stressed syllable (ex: to-DAY) • iambic pentameter: 5 iambs

  9. Poetic Form Terms: • Rhyme Scheme: the pattern of rhyming words (ex: abab) • Types of Rhyme: • Slant Rhyme- consonance and assonance • Identical Rhyme- same word repeated • Perfect Rhyme- last syllable stress match exactly (lime, rhyme) • Imperfect Rhyme- last syllables are off a little (wing, caring) • Alternate Rhyme- every other line, the last word rhymes

  10. Poetic Form Terms: • Stanza- A division or unit of a poem that is repeated in the same form • Couplet- two successive lines that rhyme

  11. Poetry Sound Terms: • Alliteration- the repetition of the first sound of a word; for example “Sally sells sea shells” • Assonance- (Slant Rhyme)similar vowel sounds in words that end with different consonants; for example: “Wanders and watches, with eager ears” from “Paul Revere’s Ride” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow • Consonance– (Slant Rhyme) similar consonant sounds at the ends of words, i.e. “blank, think, tank” • Onomatopoeia -the use of words to imitate the sounds they describe (ex: oink, meow, whoosh, splat).

  12. Assonance example: Oh, there goesRabbit, he chokedHe's somad, but he won'tgive up that easy,noHe won'thave it, he knows hiswhole back's to these ropesIt don'tmatter, he's dopeHe knowsthat, but he's brokeHe's sostagnant that he knowsWhen he goesback to his mobile home,That's when it's back to the lab againyo -Eminem

  13. Literary Elements in Poems: • Tone-the attitude the speaker has toward the subject matter (formal, informal, humorous, serious, etc.) • Imagery-the primary images or pictures the author uses to convey meaning in a poem • Theme- the author's view on life and people; a universal idea. • Theme is NOT a lesson to be learned. • Theme is NOT the moral of the story. • Setting

  14. Figures of Speech/Figurative Language • Metaphor • Simile • Personification • Hyperbole- an exaggeration • Irony (all forms) • Allusion- a reference to another work of literature or art

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